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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

the cost of getting your child to Uni!

232 replies

Ineedsharesintravelodge · 05/02/2018 12:40

Not so much an AIBU, just looking for some advice really. I have name changed for this, as I have a few friends & relatives who are on Mumsnet also. Sorry that this is long!!

My 18 year old has been looking at specific degree courses (don't want to say what, as quite outing) and she has applied for a few through UCAS and one independently, but I am finding the cost of getting her to the interviews extortionate. Most of the Universities she has applied for are 4-6 hours travelling distance away, and without gong into details about her course, she would be expected to stay at the Uni for 5-6 hrs on the day of the interview as there are several parts to the interview. As a non-driver this entails mostly two overnight stays per interview - one on the way there and one on the way back as there aren't any trains to get us there in time on the same day, or to get us back to our small northern town afterwards on the same day. Most of the Unis that she has applied to are down south, so even budget hotel lines can be fairly expensive, depending on the day and area. None of the interviews can be changed as these are mostly the last dates available, and none are consecutive so we can't take advantage of attending one the day after another.

I have priced it up for her to travel alone (daunting for a just 18 yr old from a small rural northern town - journeys are up to / 5 train changes mostly via London) and by the time we have used our railcard it doesn't make much of a price difference, and the hotels seem to charge around the same for 1 or 2 people in a room so it makes more sense for us both to go so she has the reassurance about the travel. We don't have anyone to ask who could drive her there instead, (her dad wont take time off work for this, nor will he contribute anything towards the cost. He feels he has done his part as he contributed 25% of the cost of attending a Uni open day, of which she has only been to one ).

After working it out, I have estimated that each trip will cost in the region of £250 - £350, and that is staying at cheapest hotels, travelling at cheapest time of the day whenever possible to fit in around the timing of the interview. All of the interview dates are within a 3 week window in March - how the heck am I supposed to afford it, I am a single parent on a low income, and although I have been putting some money away towards this (as and when I could afford it) it won't even cover one of the trips.

I just don't know what to do.

Do I tell her that I can't afford it, and that she can't go? Do I near bankrupt myself, by borrowing money from my household bills to take her? The amount that I am needing to find by March (or preferably before then, to get the cheapest hotel & train rates) could take me years to pay off / re juggle household bills up to date.
Do we risk it and only attend one or two? (what then, if she is offered a place at neither, and she has missed the other interviews?)
Or just go to her first couple of choice interviews but these have more demand for places?
We have discussed the possibility of not attending later interviews if she is offered a place at an earlier one, but these are not her first choice Unis within the first few interviews, and ideally we would have travel booked asap for the best prices, as leaving it until the week before to book is so expensive.
It's a dilemma. Please don't say, I should have saved for this - I have done my best, but money in our house is very tight and we only have a little disposable income each month. Just want some ideas, suggestions on the best thing to do in this situation!

OP posts:
Thecrabbypatty · 05/02/2018 18:43

Lemonshark thank god for the fellow sanity campaign! At 18 you darling little cherub is an adult. They can get married, have a baby, buy a house, travel the world, join the forces, go to war, work in Antarctica and go to prison. Can we please stop treating university like its first day at the brownies?

The name of the game is to raise adults, not overgrown children. OP sounds like sensible person, can she not go with a friend instead, as a half way compromise?

Thecrabbypatty · 05/02/2018 18:45

That way they can hostel together and make a weekend of it? Half the cost for you and a bit of independent travel too? Life on megabus is much more fun with a friend.

ThroughThickAndThin01 · 05/02/2018 18:46

Another one who has no idea.....

JosieSand · 05/02/2018 18:48

Are you on Facebook? There's a group on there with parents,students and uni staff which I've found really useful. It's called what I wish I knew about uni and they are all really friendly.

m.facebook.com/groups/488235648182391

nineteentwelve · 05/02/2018 18:48

megabus for sure, and hostels is the way to go !

i paid for mine on my own at that age, with a little bit of pocket money from my dad for food when i was there, and had the best time, even though i was doing it as cheap as possible!

TalkinPeace · 05/02/2018 18:51

At 18 you darling little cherub is an adult.
And my Son will not turn 18 until after he gets his A level results
so treating him as not yet an adult for interviews and open days is thus perfectly sensible Hmm

Thecrabbypatty · 05/02/2018 18:52

Apologies I didn't realise we were talking specifically about your son? I thought the topic was OPs 18 year old daughter?

ThroughThickAndThin01 · 05/02/2018 18:55

It certainly is about OP's daughter. A school girl.

Thecrabbypatty · 05/02/2018 18:57

Dear God alive. She is not a school girl... SHE IS AN ADULT. She has either been at college or 6th form for the last two years!!!

Thecrabbypatty · 05/02/2018 19:00

This maturity stunting infantilisation is creepy and wrong. Stop doing it, it's not healthy for you or your grown up offspring. Notice offspring, not child due to the fact that they have aged out of childhood.

ThroughThickAndThin01 · 05/02/2018 19:01

Sorry crabby I forgot that well known phrase schoolwoman Confused. Tell me - do you have university aged children?

JosieSand · 05/02/2018 19:02

Also I've been to over 10 open days over the past couple of years and have to say 95% of students have at least one parent with them.

myusernamewastaken · 05/02/2018 19:03

I am a lone parent to 2 boys both at uni...neither of mine attended any interviews or looked around any...my 2 applied online and were offered a place once they got the a level results....one is in Canterbury and the other in Lincoln....travelling up and down the country is not necessary.

Thecrabbypatty · 05/02/2018 19:04

ThroughThickAndThin01 I must of, missed it like that other classic, university child.

ThroughThickAndThin01 · 05/02/2018 19:04

Quite Josie. Much to Crabby disgust, it's just what happens these days.

ThroughThickAndThin01 · 05/02/2018 19:05

crabby as the ops did isn't at university yet no one would say that Confused

ThroughThickAndThin01 · 05/02/2018 19:06

And you have university aged people that you've given birth to crabby?

titchy · 05/02/2018 19:06

travelling up and down the country is not necessary.

It is when you're invited for interview - RTFT Hmm

TinklyLittleLaugh · 05/02/2018 19:10

Depends where and what you are studying though myuser. Plenty of sources and universities still select by interview.

bruffin · 05/02/2018 19:10

Myusername
Some courses neeed interviews, if you want to go into health care you cant get out of having an interview.
Dd didnt do too many open days because she knew she would have to do an interview for her course.

Thecrabbypatty · 05/02/2018 19:10

As it goes no I do not, but I don't need to have in order to understand the legal and cultural meaning of the word adult.

pret · 05/02/2018 19:10

Everyday on here I find something to be grateful for.

Todays is that my parents weren't like Crabby.

Headofthehive55 · 05/02/2018 19:11

If you are struggling to afford travel now, what about when she is at uni and wants to come home? My DD comes home most weekends. It would have been expensive and a pain to be a long way away!

Thecrabbypatty · 05/02/2018 19:13

Adult
A person who by virtue of attaining a certain age, generally eighteen, is regarded in the eyes of the law as being able to manage his or her own affairs.

Headofthehive55 · 05/02/2018 19:15

I didn't even think about doing anything other than my DD going to open days on her own after attending one and finding that the lecturers all addressed me instead of her. Best to let them go on their own I think.