Sonja Morganis using thecollege admissions scandalas a teachable moment for her 18-year-old daughter, Quincy Morgan.

TheReal Housewives of New York Citystar’s only child is currently in the process of applying for college, and Morgan is passing on a few pieces of valuable wisdom in the the wake of the scandal.

“It’s really a disservice to the child, because you know, having someone else take an exam for them, or to say that they’re very good at a sport, puts them in a tough situation when they get misplaced at the wrong school. … It’s gonna be a challenge for them if they’re placed at the wrong school,” Morgan, 55, tells PEOPLE.

Morgan believes that as students apply for higher education, they should be prioritizing their happiness above how revered a college or university’s name may be.

“They have to test for themselves, to be placed where they’re gonna be happy. Most important is that they’re happy at school. And that they can thrive, being happy who they are — not where they are and the name of the school. So, that’s why testing exists, because they get into the school they belong in,” says Morgan, who is partnering with CoolSculpting.

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And that’s the same advice she’s telling Quincy, who is currently interviewing and applying for college — without her mother’s monetary interference.

“That’s what I tell my daughter right now. Because, she is applying, and you know she took her test, and she does her interviews,” Morgan says. “She does all her own essays, she doesn’t even let me read them. And, she’s gonna get into the college where she belongs, and she’s gonna be happy.”

And although some parents charged in the scandal may argue that their involvement was for their child’s well-being, Morgan ultimately believes “it’s not good for the child.”

Earlier this month, actressLori Loughlin, her husbandMossimo Giannulli, and actressFelicity Huffmanwere among a list of 50 people who have been indicted as part of an alleged nationwide scheme, according to a release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Massachusetts.

Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli in 2012.

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Both Loughlin and Giannulli were arrested last week on a felony charge of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and honest services mail fraud. They werereleased on $1 million bondsand have not entered pleas. Loughlin’s attorney has not returned PEOPLE’s requests for comment.

Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin.Daniel Zuchnik/WireImage; Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage

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A source told PEOPLE last week that many of the couple’s friends have beendistancing themselvesfrom them.

“Lori and Mossimo are finding out quickly who their real friends are,” the insider said. “It’s not like they are the victims of a crime. Theyarethe crime.”

“Many of their friends don’t want to be associated with them right now,” the source added. “Their friends are shocked at the allegations.”

In aresurfaced interviewwith the Christian Broadcasting Network from 2014, Loughlin said she would never do anything that her “children have to pay the price for.”

“For me personally, I was always very thoughtful about projects that I chose for myself,” Loughlin began. “I would say to myself, ‘Can my father watch this?’ If my father couldn’t watch it, I didn’t do it.”

“And then when I had children… I always thought, I don’t want to do anything that one day might rear its ugly head and my children have to pay the price for that,” she said.

source: people.com