Communication After Freshman Move-In

IMG_5342I can remember my daughter’s first semester at UMass Amherst. We were both excited.  We shopped for weeks.  We had so much fun.  Then the day came for freshman move in. We filled up the car and started the drive.  As we got closer, I started to panic.  I was dropping off my baby and would not see her for a few months! I could feel the anxiety building and I wondered if she was feeling it too.

We finally got everything in the room and unpacked wondering how she was going to fit everything in her dorm. As we were making our way through the boxes, her roommate walks in.  They hugged and started talking about how tired they were and how much stuff they had to carry in etc.  At this point I was not sure if my daughter remembered I was still in the room?  Suddenly she turned around “okay, mom I am all set, call you later”.  I was so hurt.  Eighteen years of anticipation of the long ‘good bye’ on campus and it was over in a minute.  Not only was I hurt but I was watching other parents and their college bound students sharing tearful moments.

For days I tried to call. I left message after message.  Finally I gave up and sent a text.  Just a simple “Luv Ya” and she responded “me too”.  I nearly fell off the bed.  I felt awful.  I thought she must be so miserable.  The first long weekend, I went and picked her up (and laundry) and I asked her why she rushed me out of the room and did not answer my phone calls for days.  She told me she was a little homesick in the beginning and she didn’t want to be upset so she avoided my calls however, after getting to know people on campus she was okay and just got really busy.  I was so relieved. I thought she was just ignoring me.

In the event that you are dropping off your student this fall and wonder if they will forget who you are, just remember they are going through a transition just like we are.  They need the space and time to meet new friends, get acquainted with the campus, learn about clubs, etc.  We have been preparing them for this for a while.  So don’t be hurt when they cannot guarantee to call you on a certain day or time or you’re having a hard time trying to reach them.

What we should do as parents and family members is to establish clear communication guidelines with our students to help alleviate the worries that come with sending them to college. Questions we should all ask include: Who will call first and how often and when? Note: Know their schedules and avoid contacting them while they’re in class.  How will we communicate? Will it be a phone call, text or video chats? What happens if there’s no response for a long period of time?  And how do we define a long period of time? Is it a couple of hours, a day, a week, or two weeks, etc. Remember our students are doing what we told them to do, “meet new friends, get to know the campus, find out about clubs/activities, discover themselves and be independent”.  They are now college students.

Ninette Marzouki is the mom of a Public Health major in the Commonwealth Honors College, Class of 2018, UMass Amherst.

Encourage Students to Connect with Clubs As Soon as They Get to Campus

Get Involved!Whether an athlete or a dancer or a debater or a hiker, my students agree that one of the surest ways to avoid homesickness, make friends and have a great time at UMass is to get involved with one or more clubs.  Encourage your freshman, transfer and/or returning student to make time for this fall’s Activities Expo – the campus wide activities fair held from 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm, at the Haigis mall on Wednesday, September 7, 2016.  Pretty much every club and activity available on campus will be there.

Check out the full list on UMass Campus Pulse, the online directory for links to all club web pages. Officially recognized clubs are generally funded by a mix of member dues, fund raising efforts and some contributions from the Student Activities Fund administered by the Student Government Association.

If your student likes ice hockey, soccer, swimming, synchro skating, baseball, bass fishing or almost any other type of sport, Club sports offer a way to keep playing at a competitive level while still having time for school.  It is important to know that some Club sports do make cuts and fall sports may start practices and try outs the first few weeks of the semester, so it never hurts to let the coach and the Club president know that you are coming.

Club sport athletes practice regularly, travel, wear the school colors and, can even compete for national titles.  This past season the Women’s Club Ice Hockey team won their Division, beating out UVM, Penn State, Northeastern and URI and had the chance to compete in the American Collegiate Hockey Association national tournament in Kalamazoo, MI.

Sports not your student’s thing?  No problem.  For outdoors types, the UMass Outing Club runs an active roster of outdoor trips all year long – but pay attention to sign up deadlines because the best trips fill fast.  Service groups like Habitat for Humanity or the BoltWood Project provide opportunities to work with members of the local community.  The Daily Collegian newspaper, UVC-19 TV, and the student radio station WUMA provide a great outlet for would-be journalists.   Music and dance clubs provide performance and practice opportunities regardless of the student’s major and the UMass Amherst Student Government Association, including the residence hall House Councils, opens up opportunities to shape school policies and plan activities.  The House Council is a great way to make connections in the student’s housing cluster.  Elections are held early in the fall.

With over 200 clubs to choose from there should be something that will grab your student’s interest.  For both my UMass Amherst scholars, club friendships have been a big part of what makes UMass Amherst so special. Encourage your student to learn about clubs before Fall Move-in and to make connections in the first weeks of school when most organizations are just getting going for the new year!

Mary Turner is the mom of a former Student Government Association Senator and recently graduated Economics major, Class of 2016. She is also the mom of a rising sophomore geology major and club sport athlete, Class of 2019

 

Welcome UMass Amherst Families!


The UMass Amherst Family to Family blog site is written by the members of the UMass Amherst Parents Association Advisory Council with support from the UMass Amherst Office of Parent Services. The goal of this site is to provide a place for experienced UMass Amherst parents and guardians to share insights, advice and resources with current and prospective parents.

Whether you have discovered this site early in your student’s college search, when planning for freshman year drop-off or when planning for graduation and the great wide world after college, we hope this site will be helpful.  When you are in Amherst we hope you will participate in Parents Association activities and even consider joining the Parents Association Advisory Council.