Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's say you had a party planned for your child and intended to invite the entire class. Then one of your child's classmates started bullying him, to the point that the school has intervened. Do you still have to invite your child's bully to the party since you're inviting the rest of the class? Or do you get a pass on this rule?
I hate to completely change up a party my child has been looking forward to and make him invite only a small number of kids instead, but I can't imagine forcing him to have his bully present at the party given how much anxiety this kid causes him.
I would invite everyone except the bully. He'll learn very quickly that his behavior will get him ostracized.
Anonymous wrote:I would not invite the whole class minus one person, no matter how much of a bully he was. That's terrible to do to a kid. How old are the kids?
Anonymous wrote:Let's say you had a party planned for your child and intended to invite the entire class. Then one of your child's classmates started bullying him, to the point that the school has intervened. Do you still have to invite your child's bully to the party since you're inviting the rest of the class? Or do you get a pass on this rule?
I hate to completely change up a party my child has been looking forward to and make him invite only a small number of kids instead, but I can't imagine forcing him to have his bully present at the party given how much anxiety this kid causes him.
Anonymous wrote:6 is young enough for behaviour to change, but one way it isn't going to change is by being ostracized. Invite the bully, but ask his parents to stay.
Anonymous wrote:
1. Don't invite any bully.
2. Don't exclude one person.
3. Only solution - don't invite the entire class.
I ask my kids to pick 10-15 children for their parties, and help them if they are having trouble.