How I made sure all 12 of my kids could pay for college themselves
 

January 12, 2014
 

By Francis L. Thompson -- Francis L. Thompson is an engineer at Northrop Grumman Corp. He led the teams that designed the first Direct TV satellites and missile defense satellites, as well as ground control for these systems.
 

My wife and I had 12 children over the course of 15 1/2 years. Today, our oldest is 37 and our youngest is 22.  I have always had a very prosperous job and enough money to give my kids almost anything. But my wife and I decided not to.

 

I will share with you the things that we did, but first let me tell you the results: All 12 of my children have college degrees (or are in school), and we as parents did not pay for it. Most have graduate degrees. Those who are married have wonderful spouses with the same ethics and college degrees, too. We have 18 grandchildren who are learning the same things that our kids learned—self-respect, gratitude, and a desire to give back to society.

 

We raised our family in Utah, Florida, and California; my wife and I now live in Colorado. In March, we will have been married 40 years. I attribute the love between us as a part of our success with the children. They see a stable home life with a commitment that does not have compromises.

 

Here’s what we did right (we got plenty wrong, too, but that’s another list):

 

Chores

 

Study time

 

Education was very important in our family.

 

Picky eaters not allowed

 

Extracurriculars

 

Independence

 

In it together

 

Vacation policy

 

Money and materialism

 

The real world

 

We were and are not our kids’ best friends.  We were their parents.

http://qz.com/165716/how-i-made-sure-all-12-of-my-kids-could-pay-for-college-themselves/