Starting college can be exciting and stressful for both you and your parents. In some ways, though, it may be even more stressful for them. For your whole life, you have been one of their most important priorities and responsibilities. All of the sudden, they have to let a lot of their control go, especially when it comes to your grades. Earlier, they could access your academic information whenever they wanted to. Now, they can’t. This is because of something called the Buckley Amendment, part of a 1974 law on education and the privacy of records. Once you are 18 and in college, only you and appropriate people at your college or university (professors, advisors, etc.) can access your records without written permission from you. Many parents have a hard time letting go of other aspects of your life as well.
It is crucial that you learn how to gain the right amount of distance between you and your parents, not to close and not too far. In recent years, researchers have found that parents who continue to be too involved with their children’s education in during college years may be doing less good than harm. Such parents have been called “helicopter parents,” and a recent study published by researchers at Florida State University have found that helicopter parenting can have actually have a negative effect on college students. The researchers asked 460 students a series of questions to determine how involved mothers were with their education and they found a correlation between mothers who were overly involved with their students and students’ lowered sense of self-efficacy (the ability to fight through tough situations) and with higher self-reported levels of anxiety and depression. (1) They think this is so because helicopter parenting sends a subtle message to the student that they cannot able to work things out for themselves. On the other hand, students whose parents were supportive, but not too involved reported higher levels of satisfaction with their experiences, as well as higher levels of mental and physical health.
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- Florida State University. (2016, June 28). Helicopter parents: Hovering may have effect as kids transition to adulthood. ScienceDaily. Retrieved June 28, 2016 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/06/160628110215.htm
- Hyman, R. (2015). “Cutting the academic umbilical cord.” In Posey, S.M. & von Bohlen, T. (Eds) The snarktastic guide to college success. Boston: Pearson. p. 6.
- Hyman, p. 7
- Jacobs, L.F. & Hyman, J.S. (2013). The secrets of college success, second edition. San Francisco: Josey Bass. p. 3.
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