Anonymous wrote:My daughter is in kindergarten and she said a girl in her class does not want to play with her and leaves her out. She told my daughter that she is not her friend. Of course my daughter feels bad. We told her that mean people usually had others who were mean to them first. Her birthday is next month and she wants to invite everyone except the mean girl who told her that she is not her friend and doesn’t want to play with her.
Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone have to be friends w/ everyone? My kids don't have to be friends w/ everyone but they can't be rude, mean or exclusive.
But just saying they're not friends? Without other circumstances, that in and of itself isnt' mean girl behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't start in kindergarten.
Mean girl behavior, as in the bullying kind, doesn't really emerge until middle school.
There are incidents where kids are are unkind to each other in younger years but that's more just fumbling and immaturity. It's not systemic and deliberate taunting/exclusion etc.
This. In K, kids don't have much impulse control and lack social skills to manage interpersonal problems without being blunt.
Rather than assuming the other girl is "mean", try to work on your DD's social skills. She can learn to notice when someone wants to be left alone, to not butt in to conversations, to share and be flexible. Not saying it's your DD's fault, but they are all developing their social skills and will all benefit from support in learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn't start in kindergarten.
Mean girl behavior, as in the bullying kind, doesn't really emerge until middle school.
There are incidents where kids are are unkind to each other in younger years but that's more just fumbling and immaturity. It's not systemic and deliberate taunting/exclusion etc.
I don't know, my older daughter experienced that in first grade from one particular girl who would also get a couple others to go along with her. It only takes one "mean" girl to start that behavior. She moved away, and it's been fine ever since. My younger daughter is now in second and hasn't experienced anything like that at all.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't start in kindergarten.
Mean girl behavior, as in the bullying kind, doesn't really emerge until middle school.
There are incidents where kids are are unkind to each other in younger years but that's more just fumbling and immaturity. It's not systemic and deliberate taunting/exclusion etc.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't start in kindergarten.
Mean girl behavior, as in the bullying kind, doesn't really emerge until middle school.
There are incidents where kids are are unkind to each other in younger years but that's more just fumbling and immaturity. It's not systemic and deliberate taunting/exclusion etc.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't start in kindergarten.
Mean girl behavior, as in the bullying kind, doesn't really emerge until middle school.
There are incidents where kids are are unkind to each other in younger years but that's more just fumbling and immaturity. It's not systemic and deliberate taunting/exclusion etc.