Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My freshman daughter is having trouble in high school and dh and I are worried about her. In middle school she had a good friend group and was friends with a lot of people. Most of her friends are at different schools now (private, application etc..). She has made some new friends but says she isn't close to them and misses her middle school friends terribly. They hang out on the weekend but it isn't enough especially with all of them having sports and activities. There have also been some complications and a couple of friendships have ended and that has definitely been hard on her. She has been getting bad grades C's and B's with very few A's and overall has a worse attitude and is procrastinating on her homework and just seems very unhappy. I know this is common since its a change but how long until she adjusts and feels like she belongs again? For context she loved going to middle school (for the most part, of course there was some complaining involved) and seemed happy there. She told me she would do anything to "get her old life back" and it breaks my heart seeing her so hopeless.
But those are not “bad grades.” Earning a C is average.
Plus she’s only a freshman! I’d just give her a little space . Adolescents is a hard period of life.
Anonymous wrote:My freshman daughter is having trouble in high school and dh and I are worried about her. In middle school she had a good friend group and was friends with a lot of people. Most of her friends are at different schools now (private, application etc..). She has made some new friends but says she isn't close to them and misses her middle school friends terribly. They hang out on the weekend but it isn't enough especially with all of them having sports and activities. There have also been some complications and a couple of friendships have ended and that has definitely been hard on her. She has been getting bad grades C's and B's with very few A's and overall has a worse attitude and is procrastinating on her homework and just seems very unhappy. I know this is common since its a change but how long until she adjusts and feels like she belongs again? For context she loved going to middle school (for the most part, of course there was some complaining involved) and seemed happy there. She told me she would do anything to "get her old life back" and it breaks my heart seeing her so hopeless.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like depression. I'd consider having her see a health care provider and agree with PP about a tutor.
As far as how long it might last? My son's experience losing friends when he changed schools in 9th grade completely changed him and it was rough the entire time he was in HS.
Anonymous wrote:She needs to give herself time. It's been 2.5 -3 months. It takes time to build close friendships. She needs to remind herself to be patient, and that school is about education and that needs to be her main focus, so to prioritize getting her grades up.
Anonymous wrote:Has she joined any clubs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It takes time to make new friends in a new HS, both of my kids switched from a public MS to a private HS, didn’t know anyone on their first day, and it took some time to form new friendships. And they played for a HS sport team, so they were “involved”.
But to really didn’t happen to them until halfway through 10th grade that they found their solid friend group.
I do like a PP’s idea about the school counselor. My kids’ private school had outstanding counselors who helped them navigate some issues. I would definitely reach out.
I disagree re counselors. The public school counselors aren’t good in general. I really wouldn’t trust them with anything to be honest.
Anonymous wrote:It takes time to make new friends in a new HS, both of my kids switched from a public MS to a private HS, didn’t know anyone on their first day, and it took some time to form new friendships. And they played for a HS sport team, so they were “involved”.
But to really didn’t happen to them until halfway through 10th grade that they found their solid friend group.
I do like a PP’s idea about the school counselor. My kids’ private school had outstanding counselors who helped them navigate some issues. I would definitely reach out.