I used to think the same as PP. but this is the first year I know kids old enough to participate. I was surprised at how many very liberal parents are having their kids do it. Liberal but not diverse is what I’ve seen. I teach my kid manners and so don’t see a need for it. Not knowing the foxtrot is not going to hold them back in life. |
Feel free to do what you want with your own kid. My kid is doing cotillion because he’s attending private school as opposed to public for the first time this year & has a lot of friends in the neighborhood doing cotillion so he is doing it with them to have a standing activity to do with friends from the neighborhood once a month. And I don’t think learning some manner will hurt. |
In my group I at least know of jews, Hispanics, Arabic and Asians doing it. But not sure what you mean by diverse. |
| Who does this? Teach your child manners at home, over the course of their whole childhood. If your child doesn’t have good manners, a 6 week course isn’t going to fix what home life over the past 12 yrs failed to teach. They will revert back to whatever your normal is at home. |
In your opinion. It's actually a very good way to socialize young kids and help them learn to navigate social engagements. |
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It allowed middle school boys and girls to socialize without one-on-one pressure. And because it was supervised, it allowed all teens present to participate equally. No cool kids dominating the wallflowers. At the time my kids complained and make fun of it. But a decade later they still bring it up in conversation, explaining it to their friends, what is was. They seem to be increasingly fond of the memory.
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I'm going to go out on a limb and guess you have one child, on non-athletic children. |
Well I agree with the PP and I have multiple children who play travel sports... and would not be caught dead at cotillion. |
Where in NoVa??? Never heard of anyone doing it. |
Provide your street address for the PP. |
Her classes are for little kids, not 7th/8th/9th. |
I’m not asking for suggestions. I’m just surprised this is actually a thing in Nova. |
| It seems like the thing that very status conscious people would do. |
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My DS is doing cotillion. He's in 7th. It's not expensive.
He's exposed to so many things, which is fine. I want to expose him to different things, as well. Old traditions, specific dances, formal ways of address, a formal place setting. It's just for a more expansive perspective on life. The more knowledge, the better. |
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We are doing it for our boys. It’s not at all some kind of fancy high society event, just kids dressing up and going to a little party at the neighborhood event center. I like the classes because they do teach manners in a fun and engaging way and make it a social thing the kids look forward to. The little dance/cotillion is a fun excuse for the kids to dress up and feel fancy and grown up.
I would compare it more to confirmation classes and confirmation than some elaborate debutante ball. |