A Student and a Parent – Twice the Commitment, Twice the Cost

Posted April 16, 2021
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Being a student is hard – a full class schedule, meetings with professors, on-campus commitments, hours of reading, and the stress of tests. But on top of all of that, imagine having a responsibility that has no winter breaks, no summer vacation, and no sick days – being a parent. Because approximately 14% of Illinois college students are parents, we need to invest in making it actually possible to be a good parent and a good student. The first step is to make sure our schools know who we are. How can they best serve us if they don’t know our struggles and our specific parenting needs?

Yet, despite these circumstances, I am proud to say that I earned my degree! I received financial aid to enroll at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and I found an affordable childcare center near campus. I actually had time to focus on my classes without worrying about my daughter’s safety. And because of the low cost of childcare, I could spend more on my other expenses. My experience shows it is possible to juggle the tremendous number of responsibilities of being both a parent and a college student, but it requires support.

We know some of the hardships student parents face, but it’s hard to design solutions without knowing who student parents are or where they attend school. Illinois colleges and universities collect little to no data on student parents. Collecting some basic data on student parents like myself would inform the design of specific support services, like the low-cost childcare center that allowed me to go to school and still care for my daughter.

LaKrista Cummings is a graduate of the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, where she studied sociology and African-American studies. She is currently pursuing her Ph.D in Policy Studies in Urban Education at University of Illinois at Chicago and is the proud mom of Audrey, 6, and Shaq Jr., 2.