Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's not uncommon at progressive schools too. Something about the social pressure of left-leaning schools seems to bring it out as a form of rebellion. The kids just do a better job keeping it under wraps. I'm sorry, it sucks.
This is not just a progressive school thing, believe me. It’s present at conservative and religious schools alike. Some hide it better than others.
The reality is MS is a time of figuring yourself out as well as testing boundaries. Sometimes kids do that by doing things in the completely opposite vain if what they’ve been taught. The greatest counteracting to this is to build up you DS’ confidence and really instill what it means to do what it right even when it seems difficult and you have to stand alone. That and pushing back on inappropriate things. Parents also have to step back and let kids grow thicker skin.
Right, but what's going on with boy culture now is not just 'twas ever thus--and as PP noted, some schools are inadvertently making things worse in the way they are responding, by putting boys on defense.
To your point about "even when it seems difficult and you have to stand alone"--we are expert at this, don't worry. What schools do you think have parents who are more attentive / oriented toward raising upstanders/ethical kids, less likely to want their kid to just take path of least resistance and go with herd?
Anonymous wrote:If I could find a school like that, we’d be there. It’s pervasive and exhausting and I’m over it. DD is applying out this year to all-girls’ schools after years of hoping it would get better and investigating other co-eds thinking that surely one of them could have figured it out. I am convinced it’s an unfixable cultural problem.
Anonymous wrote:No thoughts for school, but if you're interested in sleep away camp, Kabeyun is great for just that reason. https://kabeyun.org/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's not uncommon at progressive schools too. Something about the social pressure of left-leaning schools seems to bring it out as a form of rebellion. The kids just do a better job keeping it under wraps. I'm sorry, it sucks.
This is not just a progressive school thing, believe me. It’s present at conservative and religious schools alike. Some hide it better than others.
The reality is MS is a time of figuring yourself out as well as testing boundaries. Sometimes kids do that by doing things in the completely opposite vain if what they’ve been taught. The greatest counteracting to this is to build up you DS’ confidence and really instill what it means to do what it right even when it seems difficult and you have to stand alone. That and pushing back on inappropriate things. Parents also have to step back and let kids grow thicker skin.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's not uncommon at progressive schools too. Something about the social pressure of left-leaning schools seems to bring it out as a form of rebellion. The kids just do a better job keeping it under wraps. I'm sorry, it sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am pretty concerned about tween boy culture and have qualms about sending 5th grade DS to my daughter's public middle school, where boys I've known since K are under a HUGE amount of social pressure to conform to gender norms (much more so than the girls), be edgy/aggressive, etc. (Pretty intense trash talking, constant banter involving misogynist/homophobic/racist language and images, etc.) A number of them have become really withdrawn--it is sad to see.
Are there any schools that include grades 6-8 (HS too w/b a bonus but not a requirement) AND that have a generally positive culture and supports for boys?
I want a place that is proactive about avoiding the corrosive boy culture we've seen about our public, while ALSO affirming boys and providing support for more positive versions of boyhood and masculinity. (Put another way, though I'm strongly drawn to progressive schools, I DON'T want to send him to a place where the vision of boys/men/masculinity is predominantly negative-- I'd prefer a place that holds boys to high standards but also holds them up a bit and helps them become good boys/men.)
OP we need to know what area you are looking in to help. Also some of what you mention is less school dependent and cohort dependent not to mention age and maturity.
Anonymous wrote:I am pretty concerned about tween boy culture and have qualms about sending 5th grade DS to my daughter's public middle school, where boys I've known since K are under a HUGE amount of social pressure to conform to gender norms (much more so than the girls), be edgy/aggressive, etc. (Pretty intense trash talking, constant banter involving misogynist/homophobic/racist language and images, etc.) A number of them have become really withdrawn--it is sad to see.
Are there any schools that include grades 6-8 (HS too w/b a bonus but not a requirement) AND that have a generally positive culture and supports for boys?
I want a place that is proactive about avoiding the corrosive boy culture we've seen about our public, while ALSO affirming boys and providing support for more positive versions of boyhood and masculinity. (Put another way, though I'm strongly drawn to progressive schools, I DON'T want to send him to a place where the vision of boys/men/masculinity is predominantly negative-- I'd prefer a place that holds boys to high standards but also holds them up a bit and helps them become good boys/men.)