@farmerdex I came here specifically to tell you not to panic lol because I did 1st option. My son failed a few courses during his freshman year during Covid and the all year virtual learning. He was pretending to do his work and had a pretty elaborate deception going. Was beside myself worrying about his future. Surely he was going to be living in a van down by the river I agonized over it but I had to remove the video game system permanently and make him buy his own. The young man who bought his system was basically my son 5 years from now and he told me his mother had done the same and I was doing the right thing. Wellā¦ I just didnāt know how well it worked lesson wise, life wise until this summer. He made honor roll for the first time in his life - ALL year. And did it so Iād let him get a job this summer so he could get his system. Not being able to attend school in person gave him a new appreciation for it as well I think. So donāt stress too much - just make it clear whatās expected, discuss how this lays the foundation for their life and sometimes we have to make decisions we know are the right ones for them at the time. Last summer was not a pleasant one. This summer, itās literally a new kid. If she wants a job next year her grades need to support a work permit - parents and schools sign off on those. I read through some of your responses and Iād see about getting her a therapist or a mental health evaluation with all of the teacher/student conflict. My son didnāt have all of that. Get her involved in something she really wants to do - tie her responsibilities to it somehow. You have to find what they really really care about - all through out their childhood because it changes.