Kalpana Mohan

Kalpana Mohan
Location
Saratoga, California, USA
Birthday
October 14
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Freelance writer in CA www.kalpanamohan.org kalpanamohan.typepad.com Member, Left Coast Writers

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Salon.com
Editor’s Pick
MARCH 30, 2009 2:13PM

The Brown Frown: So Where’s your kid going to College?

Rate: 25 Flag

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"I wanted to ask you for your thoughts,” says an Indian-American friend whose family is devastated by the state college admissions results last Friday. “My child didn’t make UC Berkeley or UCLA.  But he has top grades.”

  “I know your child is very bright," I told her. "Don’t do what we did. Put your ego aside and appeal to the colleges. You must!” I knew exactly how she felt, having been there only a year ago last spring.

 Spring is a thorny time of the year on many counts and I don’t understand why the roses pout. Tulips burst into this mellow season of stressed parents and distressed college applicants, marking the end of the March once again.

I recalled my own season of disappointment. I was the Indian-American parent whose social destiny would ride on where, at last, her daughter would go to college.

 Outside, in our yard, daffodils and hyacinth swayed in yellow and blue, cheering for the newborn bud. But inside our home, we went about a barren routine. Our harsh winter–one that began with an early rejection from Columbia–had just about begun. Our noses were bulbous and red, from collective crying over colleges indeed very much deserved in the eyes of this honorable family committee, yet, seemingly undeserved, in the opinion of the dishonorable, biased and clueless college admissions committee.

 Friends chose to ring the doorbell with telling leaves from their notebook of college experiences. The phone rang more often last March. Friends who rarely called decided to call ‘just to chat’ and the conversation gently plowed into the landscape of college admissions.

 How many times, I wondered then, had I been unknowingly insensitive in the previous years when other parents were grappling with their child’s emotions and their own dreams for their children? Had I ever come off as nosey? Had I overstepped my bounds? Had I seemed condescending? Had I, may be, doled out unwanted words of wisdom?

 When it was my turn, I got my earful of solicited and unsolicited advice from friends and acquaintances. I listened, nodded, smiled, laughed and commiserated, remembering to prune, shear, weed out, and trash. Some advice resembled manure. Some I’d sow for another admissions harvest four years down the road.

 “How many ‘B’s’ did your daughter have?” Parent, whose kids didn’t have a single ‘B’.

 “Didn’t you think of talking first to the department you were applying into? You HAVE to establish a relationship, you know.” Parent who believes that pimping and networking is the only way to guarantee any admission.

 “What? Your daughter didn’t make UCLA? What was her GPA? You know it’s harder to get into than Stanford.” Parent whose child is in UCLA, the best college in the country.

 “Okay, so you’ve done a lot for your own self-improvement. How much did you give to others?” Great advice from our school guidance counselor who felt my child simply didn’t have enough community service hours.

  “You mean you didn’t work with a college counselor?” Parent who donated $3000 to a counseling service only to be told that college admissions have become a game, you know.

 “You mean she didn’t have a sport on her application? The best kids have a sport.” Parent, whose kid, apparently, was courted by every coach in every college he or she applied to but hasn’t been seen holding a ball or a bat since.

  “I’m sorry. Your daughter does not have a shot at any in her first list of colleges.” College counselor who, after taking a look at my daughter’s application, tells me her honest opinion.

“Colleges X, Y and Z are a reach for your daughter. Here, try these others instead.” College counseling service–referred to by dad’s company–which plugs in a bunch of numbers and spits out a boatload of safety colleges, match colleges and reach colleges.

Our daughter, like all kids, did finally make a college that has turned out to be a great fit for her. Her experiences in her first quarter of being on her own are documented here. Reading them today and watching her during the week she spends with us at spring break, I realize I’ve a lot of things to be proud of: her tenacity, her high work ethic and her deep maturity about people and relationships. 

In my mind, however, the questions haven't begun to end.  Did I make life miserable for her by ferrying her around to music, dance and violin lessons from the tender age of four? Could I have made her life many times easier in high school so she could have focused harder on her coursework? Should I have forced her to work towards an advanced violin accreditation when she was inundated with homework and tests in four tough AP courses and juggling the other requirements of high school’s junior year? I wince every time she dredges up the details of her intense extra-curricular life.  “Did it really matter–that I killed myself over classical dance and violin for 14 years? Where was the payoff? College admissions committees don’t look beyond one’s grades and test scores anyway.”

 And thus, even a year later, many questions about my parenting skills and self-styled decisions linger, like pollen in the air, unseen by all but wreaking havoc on the inside.

Spring is a riot, both inside and outside. 

 

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Yeeowch.

This is a glimpse into a world that is quite literally foreign to me, a lower-middle-class child who grew up in the middle of nowhere where my customers at the train station-side restaurant used to nod condescendingly and assure me that, even if I DID go to college (somewhere), it wouldn't make any difference to anything. I'd be back in town waitressing after four years, they told me.

Uh.

ANY college is a good college. There. I said it.

ANY place where a young person can go, learn, grow, explore, work, play, make friends, and start figuring out who s/he is is a GOOD COLLEGE.

Rankings, ratings, blah blah blah.

I understand, intellectually, at least, the desire for a child to be admitted to The Best College.

What I don't understand is the parental involvement of ego and social one-upsmanship surrounding this issue. It's not a car or a house or a vacation home in the Hamptons, some object acquired to keep up with, or one-up, one's peers. It's the first step in a life's journey as an adult.

Sigh.

I'm glad your daughter is settling in and beginning to find herself.
I loved your feedback! And let me tell you, I went to my (then nameless but very middle-class) neighborhood college and I turned out okay. And yes, it's the first step for the child. But let me tell you, for many in the communities that I see, it's the 'END' of the big parental journey. And a lot of the child's glory is really a reflection of the parents':-))) The lengths folks around here go to get into THE BEST COLLEGE in the world. You will thoroughly enjoy (and be disgusted) by the story below which appeared last year. This sweet old lady works right by where I live!

http://www.sanfranmag.com/story/admissions-whisperer
hahahahahah! the quintessential Indian-doctor, engineer, lawyer conundrum and here Harvard, Yale, Cornell saga. I always tell people Hey! I come from lady Brabourne college and have held up my own against and with the best ... who gives!! It aint the college that makes the kid its the kid that makes the college.

rated and laughed and sighed over it too. The one saving grace I have is: being utterly unsocial I dont EVER get the chance to meet anyone and cause pain over this. Eternally grateful for small things.:)
This will sound a bit hollow coming from a childless guy who went to good colleges, but really it doesn't matter in the end. Paul Fussell, in his book Class, observes that Americans, lacking a formal and easy-to-understand class structure, have turned to educational institutions for the purpose of invidious comparisons, as he puts it.
"Anyways- where she goes for undergrad is of little consequence. People really only care about the last place you graduated from. ie. grad shool or professional school" - says the guy who barely wormed his way into UC Berkeley through nefarious family connections.
Aaron Rury: Thanks for sharing that story. I've told my daughter to read your note! I really think kids have greater insight and wisdom than parents; children of immigrant (recent) parents have to put up with the aggressive stance of their parents; a few generations later, Darwinian evolution takes care of everything:-)

Icemilkcoffee: Family connections, I thought, worked only in countries like India?

Rob: Nice insight and a neat substitute for Indian-Americans in the US who are missing the caste stuff back in the land of their origin...

T1: But Brabourne is a great college?!
Ouch. I got rejected from my first choice school. At the time, it stung. But then I met my husband at the college I did attend, so maybe I ended up there for a reason.

Unless you went to Harvard (Stanford, UCLA) someone has a more prestigious degree.
Unless you are Bill Gates, someone else has more money.
Unless you are Salma Hayek, Giselle, or Catherine Zeta-Jones (or whoever) then someone will be better looking than you. Even if you are one of those women, someone will come along and say Heidi Klum is hotter.

I try to remind myself that if I chose the competition (for education, money, appearance, whatever), in the end, I will always lose…

Remind me of this when my kids apply to college, OK?
I am disgusted. My extended family has generations of graduates from the UC system, and it makes me sick to see the challenge and experience turned into a game of who can fill in all of the squares.

I am glad to hear that there is some form of adjustment and sanity as your daughter begins her college career, but there has to be some basic passion and love for learning, here. And love of here.

The UC system is a land grant system designed for building contributing Californians who love this place more than any place on the planet, who will contribute to it's wonders, and who will work to prevent it's demise.

Your daughter is probably going to be worth ten of those automatons who maxed out on the fripperies, but who are just not whole people.
I worry about getting my Elder Into college. She announces that she's going to UCBerkeley, and I said, Not if your grades don't improve.

I didn't get to go to college, or university. Lived in a couple college towns, though. The whole culture is interesting to me.

Glad your daughter found her way, and is happy.
I just read your daughter's piece, it's lovely! It's funny, and topical, and gets the point across, and has both love for you and a warning.

She does so have a voice!
ConnieMack: Getting into Berkeley is NOT easy anymore, even with TOP grades/coursework. The kid who didn't make UCB or UCLA was one of the top kids coming out of this very competitive school; he was probably in the top 10%. There are no guarantees unless you're in the top 4% of a graduating class of 325, just around 13+ kids.
And thank you on behalf of my Voice-Only daughter. Her next piece for this magazine is on dating and Indian-American parent expectations with respect to romance and marriage and I will not be seen unveiled in my community after that one comes out.
I just wanted to come back with one personal case study, because I lived it beside him.

Raised in a conservative religious family, the young man barely graduated high school with a C- average. He immediately went into ministry, knocking on doors for Jesus, supporting himself with night-shift janitorial work. After giving up the church in his early twenties, lost and adrift and all but shunned by family, he settled into a factory job silkscreening green lines onto copper for 8, 10, 12 hour shifts, 6 or 7 days a week. When I met the young man, he had determined he had to get out of the factory. So he enrolled in the local community college, for $50/quarter. He enrolled in night classes. Two courses per quarter. He got very, very little sleep. He did homework in the factory cafeteria.

After he'd finished two years of night classes, I told the young man, "You know, the place I went to school would scholarship you in for the final two years of your Bachelor's in a heartbeat." He applied. They did.

We moved back to the Midwest, where the school that values talent and intellect and curiosity and stick-to-it-iveness is located. While he finished his BA, I worked there as a secretary, supporting us both. I also took a couple of graduate-level classes in English.

We applied for and were admitted to the school's MA program and went through it together.

His brain was still not filled. Mine was. So he applied to seven Ph.D. programs, was admitted to each, and chose Northwestern.

My brilliant ex-husband is now a tenured Professor of English (emphasis in Milton and Religious Literature) at one of the Cal State schools.

It really, really, really DOESN'T matter where you start.

It matters where you finish.
Where I went to high school, even the high achievers ended up at the same community college, many after screwing up during their first semester at a 4-year. It was like still being in high school, except the location was different and we could leave for lunch!
College: a place you go where half the teachers will suck, some will be decent, and a few inspirational, but no matter how it turns out, they will send you begging letters regularly for the rest of your life.

UCLA "the best college in the country"? Doesn't seem like that working there, but I have no way to judge it against the others.
VR: What a beautiful story about your ex-husband.
CW: But I wish all our kids would go thru community college (stay home and go to cc for 2 years)
Geebee: I'm told UCLA has cachet, because of its location. Never visited it, so I don't know.
There are so many books out now describing the racket that is college admissions. One interesting one was written by a Vanderbilt economics professor, Malcolm Getz, called Investing in College: A Guide for the Perplexed. He says to throw away the notion of going to the best college and instead look for the right one, for you. He also asks college professors where they send their kids, and I think the results were overwhelmingly in two camps: large research institutions like Michigan University or small liberal arts schools like Oberlin College.

We went through this process for the first time last year, and I don't feel any wiser for having gone through it. I can't say with any certainty that we made the right decision, and I still feel that we didn't maximize my son's potential in terms of scholarship opportunities. I think it's a rough process, and I hope it shrinks in importance by the time my second goes through it in a couple years.

Something you don't mention but I have discovered is that the "going away" experience that is so conventionally considered necessary is overrated. For those who suggest kids learn responsibility and independence, I say they leave the responsibility of the home life--where, at least in my son's case, they participate in the maintenance and upkeep of the home and family life--and go off to Fun Camp, where their sole responsibility is to attend classes and learn. Sure that's a lot, but in our case, it's a lot less than what he had before leaving. I think it's a sign of the relative wealth of our society that we pay tens of thousands of dollars to send our children away to live in tiny rooms with horrid conditions for a program of study that most can get nearby. I think the community colleges and local universities are going to be looking better and better for more families in these difficult economic times. For the right parents--those who don't hover and who allow their adult children to come and go freely--staying at home is a great choice. I will consider it more seriously with Nos. 2 and 3.
I'm not over-fond of Gibran, but this suits, regarding children:

They come through you but not from you,
And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.

I'll be back to read more. Rated.
Kalpana--
We are just now undergoing this process with my son. He has been rejected by one of his first-choice schools and wait listed by another; we're waiting, somewhat dejectedly, on the third. His "safety" school is the large state university where I teach. I'm disappointed for him even though I know that however things turn out he will get an excellent education; my wife and I are also disappointed in ourselves for not doing X, Y, or Z that might have helped his chances along the way. Like you, we have another child who will go through the process in four years.
Although we're not Indian-American, my son, who is very gifted in mathematics, is close with a number of Indian-American classmates. So I have some appreciation of where you're coming from, which is not so different, maybe, from my situation: I'm a Ph.D. from blue collar roots and have always striven up, up, up--causing some pressure for my children. Your daughter sounds like she'll figure it all out, as I'm sure my son will; I share with you the agony of trying to let go while continuing to care deeply, trying to separate my ego from the ultimate objective of providing the opportunities my kids need to become the people they can become.
I'm not a parent. Really still a kid that just finished college myself. But now I'm a teacher and I have juniors and seniors who are asking me for advice. Sometimes I have this kid come to me and say I want to go to such and such college. And I just wince. Because I know there is not a single school that could fit them less.

I tell them what my history teacher in high school told me. You must find a school that fits you. A community that you are proud to be a part of. Its amazing to me how quickly you can pick up the personality of a campus just by setting foot on it. (Unfortunately not everyone can travel around visiting everywhere. I was not able to and many others are not either). The truth is no matter how fabulous a university is, if a student is not happy living there he/she is not going to do well. So the pressure from peers and from family to go the BEST school you get into just kills me sometimes. Because sometimes its not a good fit. Sometimes it is, but that alone is not reason enough to make a particular college your choice.

If a student is planning on going to a community college I always try to make the point that they need to do it elsewhere. They need to get a least an hour or two away from home. This is just part of the growing process - learning to find their own life under their own steam. If they get a few roommates its not even significantly more expensive. Parents sometimes hate that advice, but in my limited experience the experience of getting away from home is vital.
Kalpana, your worry that pushing your daughter to do extracurricular activities was too hard for her-- that struck a chord with me. It probably was difficult and stressful for her, but now she has the knowledge that she is capable of surviving difficulty and stress. Life is sometimes hard. She is equipped to deal with that, thanks to you.

Also, in encouraging her to be a well-rounded person, you strengthened her mind and you gave her knowledge, abilities, and choices that she would otherwise not have. The world is a crazy place. You never know what knowledge or skills will come in handy; better to have a lot of tools in your kit.
Kalpana,

Even though not there yet, -my daughter will be 14 in July-, I can relate to your article.
We had the same stress, just for applying to high schools. The local public high school was a total disaster for our son, -who has Asperger syndrome- and is a factory of about 4,000 students. We noticed in the 4 years our son was there, that attention was really and truly only given to those kids deemed "gifted and talented", those enrolled in Honors or AP classes. So we decided not to go back there with our daughter.
Applying to a private high school is a good test road for universities, I am told: from applications to essays, from open houses to shadow visits to re-visit days once accepted, from interviews to SSATs, it was non stop from September to the dreaded month of March... She got waitlisted at her first and second choices, rejected from her third and accepted at her fourth and fifth (which, ironically, were my first and second choices for her, because her personality is a better fit and their student body and curriculum is international and open-minded).
We are not Indian-Americans, but we are immigrants nonetheless. Coming from Old Europe is not a guarantee that you will not have a major cultural shock, nor find yourselves always having to prove your value to the all American boys and girls next door. Our language and customs are different too.
I also can recommend a book I read 2 years ago, "The Overachievers" about the nightmare and the stress for high school students and their families, of applying for university. Now I will have to tell my daughter (who dreams BIG) that it is tougher than she thinks out there... Would you believe it? Your story might be premonitory: she actually told me today her first choice for university is UCLA-Berkeley!
All this thoughtful input. I don't know which one to address.
Kasienda: The minute my daughter set foot at NU, she knew it was the right place for her; two quarters later she says that she falls somewhere in the middle of the kids' potential there-which is great because it challenges but doesn't discourage.
LSUJP: Hang in there, something wonderful is coming your son's way, I'm sure! You sound like such a great dad.
Zella: Like you say, many of the things we do give our kids aren't tangible. I hope all this discipline will give her the strength to manage her dual discipline life in college!
@Rob ST. Amant

It was the British, in the nineteenth century, who refined their already established class structure with the category of gentleman-as-determined-by educational affiliation. Americans did not invent this particular cult of academic prestige by contrast with the British; rather they inherited it from the British.
But you know I attended the prestigious university department wherein Paul Fussel held court at the end of his career and always found him to be a half-informed ass.
Haven't read the other comments yet, but my husband and I are both products of the state university system. I expect my daughter will go the same route. We've got four more years to ponder it...and try and figure out how we're going to pay for it.
Most college education is vastly overpriced. How much debt are you going to have when you get out is going to be much more relevant to your success than the brand of your diploma.

My friend sent his daughter to Princeton for Computer Science. Wonderful, but absolutely nobody will care, they will only care which technical tests she can pass.

As far as the competition goes, just don't play the game, you'll be much happier in the end.
I'll second Verbal and bluesurly's comments here; ANY college is a good one, and "mediocre" state schools often have more engaged, dedicated instructors than the big league schools.

I had lunch with a professor who was interviewing for a spot in our department last year, and whose C.V. looked like it had been handed down to us by God himself; Ivy League all the way, widely published, a list of dissertation readers that matched the editorial board of the Norton Anthology of English Lit...and yet, she admitted that she regretted her choice of schools. She never actually spoke with any of these readers--they just signed paperwork and showed up for a few minutes of her defense. She was encouraged not to socialize with her colleagues--work, work, work! Even though she looked like (and was) a great applicant, she didn't get offered the position--and this is a second tier school. Meanwhile, we're sending recent doctoral students to Oberlin, Dartmouth, etc...it's not where you go, but what you can accomplish while you're there.
Lainey:

What do you mean horrid conditions?

At least where I went, the rooms may have been small, but they were nice. How much room do you really need anyway?
I feel your pain, but one just can't win. Daughter who is in grad school has done the first two legs of the HYP triad (with a side trip to Oxford) and I have to always fight off snide remarks about "legacy" and such from the local desi community! What matters is that your daughter is happy, neighbors and community members be damned.
I've seen this from several perspectives.

First, I was an overachieving student. Straight As, private school, sports, clubs, super high test scores, etc. 2 bachelor degrees, working on a master's. Applied to Lehigh, Rice, Wash U, Delaware, Kansas. Got in everywhere, fell in love with UD, and they gave me enough money that I could go. I LOVED UD, once I got over my snobbish pissiness about not attending a private school. Guess what, I was loan-free at the end of it. Now I'm attending U Alabama Birmingham, because I live here in B'ham and I can ride my bike. And it's cheap. I got to go to Los Alamos for 9 months to do student research--obviously, being from a tiny school didn't harm me.

My boyfriend was a solid B-student all the way through. Also did private school, though he's from a city where all the white kids go to private school, so that's more of a racial thing than an overachieving thing. Thinks I'm crazy because I still get antsy if I don't get an A. Went to Sewanee, a good school but definitely not on anyone's radar if they're not Southern, Episcopalian, and/or hardcore humanities people. Went to U Alabama-Birmingham, the state school, for dental school. Now attending UNC to do a residency. Going to be a prosthodontist and make CRAPLOADS of money. All of his schools are respectable, but definitely not flashy. His grades were what I would consider "bad" (again, an A-student's perspective of a B-student.)

Do you know what I do? I teach children--I'm a free lance tutor. Now, I am an awesome tutor, but that's because I'm good at school. So while my grades etc. would have opened doors for me anywhere, I have chosen a less stressful life. And it kills me to see some of these kids I tutor getting wigged out about college, because man does it ever NOT MATTER. If you go, and finish, you're already ahead of the game. Ivies are only worth if if you want to be in federal politics--though this past fall demonstrated that attending Delaware wouldn't do you any harm. My parents went to teachers' colleges, for cryin' out loud, and my parents definitely were upper-middle class, fiscally-speaking.

Go to the school that you fall in love with. Not the one that you think is the "best" because someone else told you it was.
I agree with the other posters that the most important thing is to find the best college or university for the student. To say a school is "the best in the country" is disingenuous because there is no one school that is right for everyone.

An example:
The university that I attended for undergrad happened to be ranked #1 by US News the year that I applied. (A school that my college counselor swore up one side and down the other that I would not get into.) One of my classmates came from Pakistan and told me that the only reason she had applied was that she applied to the "top ten" schools in the States and because she got into the "#1" school she came. It wasn't until she arrived that she realized the school offered none of the things she wanted to study. Thankfully after graduation she got into a graduate program in the field she was really interested in and is now doing quite well. I heard versions of this story throughout my time there.

At said university, I was a tour guide for 3 years and gave tours to prospective and admitted students. If you had gone on my tour (or that of any of the other guides) you would've thought we were trying to convince the students not to come but in reality I wanted them to have a good sense of the place and realize that it is the right place for some people and the wrong place for others. That isn't a value judgement on the student or the university, it is just true.

Now I am a graduate student at a very different type of university, one that would never dream of breaking the top 50 on that list. I was admitted to PhD programs at Harvard and Princeton but they weren't the right place for me or what I want to do. In my PhD program we have people from the Tech schools, people from the Ivies, people from liberal arts schools you've never heard of and people who spent time at community college and none of that matters anymore. While having degrees from "big name" schools does help open some doors, ultimately the person and their work will have to stand on their own (unless they are in politics...). And in general the kind of people who would judge you based solely on the schools you've attended, aren't the kind of people whose opinion should matter to you.

I think that the way college admissions (and decisions) are treated in our country really does a disservice to the students. Decisions on where to apply (and where to ultimately attend) should be made based on finding a place where the student will be happy and can grow both personally and academically. There is nothing wrong with trying to figure out what schools would be safety schools and what schools would be a reach but no one should ever apply to a school that isn't right for them.

It sounds like your daughter is doing just great and ultimately that is the most important thing.
In my experience, this sort of frantic, desperate, frankly narcissistic application-padding is perfectly useless. The willingness to work like a trained monkey does not make a scholar. Extracurriculars do not make an interesting person or a worthwhile applicant. Going to the Best Preschool to get into the Best Elementary School and going to the Best Prep School to get into the Best College is not a guarantee, implied or otherwise, of having the Best Child, the Best Parenting Skills, the Best Career, the Best Life.

And, frankly, yes, you should question your parenting skills. Sounds hateful, but being a droning helicopter, hovering over your child and airlifting them into every sport, instrument lesson, activity, and prep course you can think of so that they can fulfill your dreams of raising the Best Child with the Best Life so that you can maintain your social standing and have the ability to one-up all the other parents is lame. It's a detriment to your child, your relationship with them, and their ability to truly become interesting, relevant, and a good applicant.

I know all of this because I'm a mediocre student, the owner of solid B averages ever since middle school, academically undistinguished in the extreme. I have no violin lessons to my name, though I do have a huge number of community service hours I came by because I was doing interesting work not because I felt obligated to. I worked enough in high school and college to get B's or A's, and spent the rest of my time hiking, traveling, becoming an excellent amateur naturalist, and reading stuff that I cared about. I got into a private university, even with so little attention to my application padding, and

So the admissions game is irrelevant. It's what you do that matters, it's why you do what you and what you learn from it. Working hard doesn't especially matter, working on what you care about does. Bragging rights don't matter, good stories do. Getting an A in a class doesn't matter, taking a class that influences your worldview and steers you in a new direction does. Forcing yourself to be unique doesn't work, learning what makes you unique does. And genuinely interesting uniqueness is what gets you noticed, not the frantic attempts to be noticed.

You want to be a good parent, you want your kids to stand a decent chance of not only getting into a good college but having a college experience worth having, let them go. Quit your desperate attempts to manipulate them into fulfilling your social fantasies and let them develop as their own people. Stop worrying about prestige and standing and stop forcing your worries on them. Let 'em get a B for once. It won't matter. They'll still get into grad school if they want that, they'll still get into college and get a degree. Wildflowers are more interesting than hothouse geraniums.
College admissions can be a crapshoot. Your daughter sounds like an intelligent and hard working person. Hopefully she got intrinsic joy from the music lessons beyond what it was able to do or not do for her academic resume.

Hang out with some people whose children are easygoing underachievers. Realize how accomplished your daughter really is and realize also that someone, somewhere is more accomplished than she. So what? There are many many pathways to a successful and meaningful life.

Get over the idea of "safety colleges" and "reach colleges"-- look for a good school where the teachers focus on educating the students rather than publishing and achieving personal renown. It makes a difference. Try to avoid too much student loan debt-- or any if possible.

Love learning for the sake of learning and choose a profession in which the sense of purpose and joy of work outweighs the inevitable day-to0-day tediums of any job.

You sound like a loving mom who is a little caught up in the status game. It hurts to play that game for too long-- there is no real happiness to be found in the game of making comparisons.
My daughter did early admission at MIT, got wait listed and finally rejected. I think Cornell rejected her too. We were a weird duo throughout the whole college process sort of bumbling through in our gypsy fashion. She did get accepted to Rensselaer and the tech college she is going to now. We decided Rensselaer was too hard to spell so chose the other college. Just kidding. We made the process an adventure and she wanted me to decide for her which I refused to do. Like, you and your daughter, we are very happy with the fit and she did select the college I wanted her to go to as well. Best wishes to you and your daughter. Don't second guess yourself, I do that and think how I could have been a better mother. Your daughter is happy and doing well. You did your mommy job! Too bad we don't get mom degrees.
I feel like I could have gone to high school with your daughter if she were a bit older. I remember all of this and two of my best friends in high school were Indian American. Gosh- this brings up memories of orchestra and AP classes and all of that stress- and joy too- I loved the people I went to high school with-they challenged me. My life feels like it kind of went off the rails, though. I left college after less than two years due to depression and years later finally finished my bachelors at a college here in Chicago that is creative, but not necessarily prestigious. I have very complicated feelings about school and what it is and isn't so this piece really struck a chord with me.

I'm planning on reading a book called Lost in the Meritocracy about what it's like in the prestigious schools in America- it sounds fascinating. It's based on this article in the Atlantic:
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200501/kirn
Thank you all for rating/berating!!/commenting on this essay.

I love and appreciate all these thoughtful pointers.

Charlie L/JenniferC: I admit to be being a helicopter parent; I've landed now and I'm glad to say my daughter has found her wings. May be not the pair of wings I'd have selected for her but she found them and I'm going to shut up (for once). I've also told my son I'm retiring and that he's in charge of his destiny even if it hovers between a B+ and an A-. He's a great kid and I suspect he'll figure it all out.

Sarah: Tell your daughter to dream and go after Cal Berkeley, it's a fun place; great Indian-American dance team there if she wants to join!

Rob: Your comment: "Americans did not invent this particular cult of academic prestige by contrast with the British; rather they inherited it from the British." And, of course, the Indians–who specialize in gentle and innocuous one-upmanship–took this from the Brits when they left India in 1947. The snob value attached to academic degrees is so high in India that people like me can't shake it off. I refer to that in an earlier post: http://open.salon.com/blog/kalpanam/2009/03/17/the_brown_frown_dont_get_caught_nude_in_the_appenzell

Highland Girl: Thanks for sharing your A vs B perspective. I see mostly A types in the community I circulate in (which is the cachet-ridden Silicon Valley), but there are enough instances here of some who made it big on pluck and NOT where they went to school.

Planetgrad2: Very useful comments and I'll be certain to point my daughter to your experiences. Thanks for taking the time to write them up here.

Leonde Delmare: Hats off to you on making an adventure of this. You must teach a
class to parents in this area on how to enjoy this and not look like Dementors for three months.

JustJuli: I'm happy to hear this piece made sense to you. Not everyone can relate to
my particular dilemma. It's a strange life we lead here where we're a stone's throw from Stanford and Berkeley.