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. Is it his first semester? That's HUGE in any advice/decision. All sorts of things can have gone wrong (including but not limited to the just plain slacker fucking off that a surprising number on this list seem to be assuming as fact without your input). , Is it his first time away from home and YOUR structured life? . Did he take on an outrageous course load instead of easing into his education? I took a science-level chem course my first semester -- A-grade work everywhere else but that ONE course overwhelmed me. I dropped focus on everything else and pulled that F-grade Chem up to a B-... but everything else dropped from A's to B's. Important lesson learned -- but it was one I had to learn. . Has he been ill? People above have mentioned mental and or emotional challenges -- certainly something to explore. Is he depressed? Is he eating well and regularly? Does he have the focus normal for him? Talk to him and listen to him -- that's the best advice I've seen on this thread so far. Talk to him and listen to him. . Is he physically ill? One semester in Pennsylvania, I'm pretty sure NOW that I was enduring a bout of Valley Fever (from visiting here), something specific to several small desert regions, including the Sonoran Desert in Tucson. VERY debilitating. My doctor was clueless and just had me ride it out (took MONTHS, but his experience didn't point him to the possibility of Valley Fever -- doesn't exist in Pennsylvania and he missed asking a crucial question or two in my history). I bulled my way through it, but there wasn't a SINGLE DAY that I didn't want to just say fuck it and drop out. Again, is he physically ill? That can include psycho-somatic symptoms brought on by stress, etc. . If he's beyond his first semester -- how has he done up 'til now? If this is a drastic departure, he may need anything from encouragement from you to motivational help from professionals -- and that's probably available for free at his school. . Is he being bullied/harassed? Has he split with a S/O? Is he just plain lonely or homesick? Any gender/orientation issues that he's just realized or is finally dealing with? . This is a biggie, too. Are drugs or alcohol involved? If he's had or has developed a problem, he's in an environment that will give him plenty of encouragement for denial and rationalizations. Hell, it'll give him plenty of just plain WOO-HOO encouragement. Talk to him and listen to him. . Is he into gaming seriously? Has he developed a problem? Me -- it was Legend of Zelda 'til 4 or 5 AM EVERY morning and then several hours of sleep -- had to go cold turkey and still won't (hell... CAN'T) have a game machine in my house. . Lastly, but just as importantly, is he (as many above seem to immediately presume), just plain fucking off and slacking? Straight from high school to college is not for everyone -- despite how hard that route is PUSHED at young people -- and it may have taken a while to catch up to him. Some take a semester or a year or two off for "life experience" (read that as fucked-up entry-level job. perhaps involving a paper hat or a necktie AND a name tag. DEFINITELY a motivator to do well in college. . The Army straightened me out/gave me focus and confidence. I used to suggest that as a last resort solution, but not now. NOT AT ALL, NOW. I think they're abusing these young men and women and they (and we) will be suffering for it 10 years or more down the road. Look at all the PTSD from a strict-boundaried single one-year tour in Vietnam. And look at these poor folks going back and going back and going back with indeterminate tours of duty in combat zones. We will ALL pay for the sins of the chickenhawks' for a long, long time. . However... me, if I'da gone straight to college, I have no doubt that I would have drunk/smoked my way through a year of Bluto's life from Animal House, dropped out with a 0.0 GPA and a substance abuse problem, and been so soured on the experience that I probably would never have gone back. . I waited 10 years before I could afford to go, even with the GI Bill and grants (I was smart enough not to take out a single student loan). I worked fulltime and went to school fulltime simultaneously and maintained a 3.6 GPA. I was hungry -- HONGRY for larnin' by then. . Talk to him and listen to him. BIG. . And then talk to us (and maybe listen to us). There's a wealth of experience and perspective here for you to weigh. . Again, crucial info from you is needed for a lot of people with a whole spectrum of personal experience to suggest things. . Sorry for any grammatical mistakes. etc. Too tired/unfocused to proofread very well. .
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