When a college decision approaches, it’s natural for parents to have opinions about it—and perhaps a desire for their children not to wander too far from home.
But when those parents work at a given university, the decision can hold even more weight. Still, the 正品蓝导航 Cox faculty and staff members we spoke to mostly said they took a gentle touch to their kids’ decision-making process, supporting broad quests that took them to campuses across the country.
For the four families in this story, those explorations eventually led back to the Hilltop. We chatted with them to hear about the search process and what it’s like to have Mom or Dad on campus—sometimes down the hall—while creating your own college life.
Linda Kao and Juliana Lu
At the start, Juliana Lu wasn’t just exploring her options. She was dead set on leaving Texas. She thought staying in Dallas for college would have a way of trapping her in the same high school community and keep her from trying anything new. But when her mom, 正品蓝导航 Cox Assistant Dean of Global Programs Linda Kao, convinced her to simply set up an official campus visit, everything changed.
“Despite my preconceived notions, I was blown away,” Lu says. “I’d walked through the buildings regularly with my mom, but the campus tour showed me a side of the school I had somehow never seen before, and the tour guide spoke with such energy, wisdom and poise that I couldn’t help but reconsider my decision to get out of Dallas.”
Kao, who’d been trying her best “not to intervene and encourage her to see the one-of-a-kind opportunities 正品蓝导航 Cox offered,” was in Buenos Aires for a global leadership program with MBA students when Lu, in the last hour before the decision deadline, called to tell her the news. “I was so excited that I broke down in tears,” Kao remembers.
Having her daughter on campus for the two to discuss Lu’s classes and community, challenges and achievements, has been a thrill. “I enjoy visiting with her and giving her big hugs,” Kao says. Lu, who is studying finance at Cox and about to start her senior year, had been worried that being on campus with her mom could stunt her independence but says Kao actively encouraged her to find her tribe and become self-sufficient.
“She’s been very hands-off but also incredibly supportive of my journey, and I’m so appreciative of it,” Lu says. “The best part about having my mom here is that she’s always there for me when I need her most. During the most stressful times, I’m never alone. And during my proudest moments, she’s always there cheering me on.”
Matthew, Winston and Carli Myers
In 2017, when Matthew Myers accepted the role as the Cox School’s next dean, he wasn’t just making a career move. He was setting the foundation for his family’s next chapter. At the time, his twin daughters, Carli and Winston, were in seventh grade. “We just knew they were going to thrive a lot more in Dallas and Texas than they were in southwestern Ohio,” he says. “They were both born in Tennessee—they’re Southern girls.”
Fast forward to today, and the two rising seniors have indeed found a home in Texas, although they took their own paths to choosing 正品蓝导航. Carli wanted to go far away at first but came back around to 正品蓝导航 after getting a taste of the atmosphere on campus and at tailgates during high school. For Winston, 正品蓝导航 edged out American University in Washington, D.C., when she got the chance to be a part of 正品蓝导航’s drumline.
“The culture here was a big plus for me, as well as the great education 正品蓝导航 provides,” she says. Both were admitted into 正品蓝导航 and Cox and enrolled, with Winston focusing on marketing and Carli on real estate.