Anonymous wrote:Is it possible she's being harassed by someone in her homeroom and just doesn't want to tell you, even if she usually has no problem sharing things? Crying at night and in the morning seems a little extreme just because she doesn't want to read all day.
Anonymous wrote:Is it possible she's being harassed by someone in her homeroom and just doesn't want to tell you, even if she usually has no problem sharing things? Crying at night and in the morning seems a little extreme just because she doesn't want to read all day.
Anonymous wrote:6th grade is first year of middle school for us. 5th grade was pretty rough too socially but she didn't seem to mind the school part. Now, she just doesn't want to go at all. She's compliant so she doesn't flat out refuse, but she begs to stay home and often cries the night before or even in the morning about going to school. She has made a new group of friends this year that went to a different elementary school and so far they seem really nice and a lot healthier than her friends at her elementary school (who are at this middle school too.) She swears that nothing "happened" and she's not the type to keep things to herself - she is an over-sharer. She just says school is boring. The blocks are really long (80 minutes, A/B day schedule) and she particularly hates homeroom (20 minutes) and study hall (40 minutes) because she has nothing to do. She does like reading but doesn't want to just sit a school reading all day.
Has anyone dealt with this? I don't know what to do - its really hard to see how upset she is each night thinking about going to school the next day. Our county still offers a virtual option and I've offered that to her for 7th grade but she says that would be "worse" (I agree) but I just wanted her to know it was an option in case something was happening that she didn't want to tell me.
She has straight A's. She's perfectly happy and does not seem depressed when she is not at school. She sees her friends outside of school and enjoys it and looks forward to it. Summer she is like a different person - just totally happy and not stressed or depressed at all.
Has anyone experienced this? I don't know how to help her or make this better.
My older daughter doesn't love school either, but its never been anything like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it possible to change schools? Clearly she's not getting fulfillment at the school for some reason and if she's getting straight A's and telling you she's bored, she likely needs a more challenging environment.
OP here. Not really. We could move her to a different public in our district but I don't think it would help with the boredom since the curriculum is basically the same. The only private we could afford is the local parochial Catholic but its small and those kids have been together since K and she would be entering in 7th grade. She's slow to make friends and very sensitive so I feel that could end up a social disaster.
There is an enrichment class during study hall but its for "gifted" students only. We are reapplying for her this year, but she wasn't selected in elementary so I'm not optimistic. She will start taking foreign language next year and a harder math class so maybe that will help? I just don't see how any of us can deal with this for 6 more years!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I doubt it’s the fact she’s bored give me a break
OP here. I'm not saying "she's such a genius, she's so bored." I'm saying the school day is just boring. I actually think its more the amount of downtime in the day (the homeroom, the study hall, the free time at the end of every block) that is boring, not the class content itself.
Anonymous wrote:I doubt it’s the fact she’s bored give me a break
Anonymous wrote:I posted a few weeks ago about my 7th grader experiencing the exact same. She also has a block schedule. I’m keeping my daughter where she is as I really like her school and our small district. I don’t have any solutions. For us, virtual would be out of the question, as that’s completely isolating. I am just hoping next year she has better teachers and a better mix of friends in her classes.
Anonymous wrote:I posted a few weeks ago about my 7th grader experiencing the exact same. She also has a block schedule. I’m keeping my daughter where she is as I really like her school and our small district. I don’t have any solutions. For us, virtual would be out of the question, as that’s completely isolating. I am just hoping next year she has better teachers and a better mix of friends in her classes.
Anonymous wrote:Is it possible to change schools? Clearly she's not getting fulfillment at the school for some reason and if she's getting straight A's and telling you she's bored, she likely needs a more challenging environment.