DD is in her second year at uni studying her favourite A level subject. It’s a uni that has a fantastic reputation generally (consistently in the top 10) and specifically for her area of interest.
But it hasn’t remotely lived up to expectations.
On the academic side, she hates her course - and I can understand why. There’s nothing in the structure of it that facilitates getting to know others on the course - it’s so solitary. DD says the lectures are often dull and not engaging. Assignments are given without clear expectations of what good looks like; her cohort were once given a sample submission as an example without being told if it was any good! What’s the point of that? (Turns out it was a 2.2.)
DD is bright (9s at A level), conscientious, prides herself in doing well and is trying her best with her coursework. Some assignments have come back with unexpectedly low marks, which she could handle if she knew why, and how to improve, but feedback is skeletal, vague and students have been told explicitly not to ask for more specific feedback. DD doesn’t know how to “get it right”. (This isn’t how I remember uni.) DD wanted to get a first but now, really struggling to motivate herself, she’s worrying she won’t get a 2.1.
DD is sociable, friendly and thrives in a team and with a sense of community, and just isn’t feeling that while away at uni. She made some wonderful friends in first year via a shared interest but they then graduated, and this year, despite her being actively involved in uni life and extra-curricular activities, she has felt lonely. She has such a lovely group of friends from school, which has set the bar high, and uni isn’t coming close on that front.
She’s also dealing with a long-term physical health problem which flares up from time to time, and affects her participation in some of the extra-curricular stuff she enjoys most. So this gets her down too.
DD is struggling to cope. She’s come home for a few days to revise (“uni doesn’t feel like home”) and we’ve chatted a lot. She’s just so down with it all, ruminating, blaming herself for not trying harder to wrap her head around the way the course expectations and marking work (I don’t think there’s more she could have done on this front), struggling to get going with her work, saying, “I can’t believe I’m paying for this!”
It’s too late to switch course. We can’t afford for her to start a different degree from scratch. She feels that quitting will limit her work options and she’ll always regret not having the resilience to push through. And she says if she quits and comes home, there’ll just be different problems: what to do work-wise, and loneliness due to her close friends being away at their unis.
In a few days, she’ll have to go back for exams and I’m worried about her. Are there any other options here that we’re missing? Is there any way she can get more direction/feedback from those delivering the course and around marking, so she feels more confident tackling future assignments? (Her tutor hasn’t been much help.) What strategies can she use to get through the next 16 months when she already feels like this?
She’s had periods of getting quite low in the past, usually briefly thankfully, and a severe, commonly heritable, mental health condition runs in the family, so it’s pretty important for DD to stay on as even a keel as possible.
Grateful for any thoughts - we can’t see the wood for the trees with this. Thanks.