Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, we moved between our quiet DD's 6th and 7th grade years. She is our middle and I worried about her the most - her older sibling is super adaptable and moving in elementary school for her younger siblings seemed like really no big deal.
Our 7th grader has adapted incredibly well. She is very observant and deliberate so the first month was a bit hard while she just mainly watched and tried to get the feel of the girls in her grade, but she has ended up with two such great kind friends and an acquaintance group that has had no drama in all of 7th grade.
So I guess overall my advice would be to encourage her to take her time before jumping into friendships while also being aware that it might be a little hard at first but that it will all work out pretty shortly.
Good luck!
Thank you. Did you move into a public or private school? How big?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“DC” is a huge, diverse area, especially if you count the DMV. Where you end up matters. My kid is at TJ, and lots of super smart introverts come in knowing no one. I would imagine it’s the same at many of the private HSs and competitive entry magnets. One of DD’s friends is going to Madeira. Knows no one, but on all sorts of meeting people lists.
In base schools in FCPS, you kid would be better off places with more transient populations (military, diplomats) or places with screwed up feeders. Carson MS splits into 4 HSs. So everyone ends up losing a big part of their friend group. I’m not sure what the comparable part of DC or MD is.
Having BTDT with kids going into 5th and 7th, and then later TJ, I would suggest moving around Memorial Day and joining the neighborhood pool. Try to get your kid hooked up with community summer activities. Beginning of summer at Carson, and most kids with an instrument head to Franklin Band and strings camp for 3 weeks of half days. It’s low key and a way to meet people, but not a lot of social pressure. If you post in the appropriate school forum what your school is, people will tell you what the kids do over the summer.
And STRONGLY encourage your kid to go out for a freshman sports team or marching band in the fall. Or join the fall drama production. Sports and band practice will start and become intense in the 3-4 weeks before school starts, and it is a good way to instantly become part of a group. Your kid does not have to be any good, or get a single minute of playing time. If they know the other 11 members of the JV volleyball team well enough to have a lab partner in chemistry and someone to eat lunch with, it’s a start.
And don’t worry. The DMV has a lot of super smart kids. And a lot of kids whose parents move them in at inconvenient times for jobs. There are more people like your kid than you might realize.
When my kids were younger a coworker with older kids said his strategy was to always have them in Band, so that they had an instant set of friends and it worked well.
Anonymous wrote:“DC” is a huge, diverse area, especially if you count the DMV. Where you end up matters. My kid is at TJ, and lots of super smart introverts come in knowing no one. I would imagine it’s the same at many of the private HSs and competitive entry magnets. One of DD’s friends is going to Madeira. Knows no one, but on all sorts of meeting people lists.
In base schools in FCPS, you kid would be better off places with more transient populations (military, diplomats) or places with screwed up feeders. Carson MS splits into 4 HSs. So everyone ends up losing a big part of their friend group. I’m not sure what the comparable part of DC or MD is.
Having BTDT with kids going into 5th and 7th, and then later TJ, I would suggest moving around Memorial Day and joining the neighborhood pool. Try to get your kid hooked up with community summer activities. Beginning of summer at Carson, and most kids with an instrument head to Franklin Band and strings camp for 3 weeks of half days. It’s low key and a way to meet people, but not a lot of social pressure. If you post in the appropriate school forum what your school is, people will tell you what the kids do over the summer.
And STRONGLY encourage your kid to go out for a freshman sports team or marching band in the fall. Or join the fall drama production. Sports and band practice will start and become intense in the 3-4 weeks before school starts, and it is a good way to instantly become part of a group. Your kid does not have to be any good, or get a single minute of playing time. If they know the other 11 members of the JV volleyball team well enough to have a lab partner in chemistry and someone to eat lunch with, it’s a start.
And don’t worry. The DMV has a lot of super smart kids. And a lot of kids whose parents move them in at inconvenient times for jobs. There are more people like your kid than you might realize.
Anonymous wrote:My only advice is I wouldn’t do it again. Especially after she’s gained a group of friends.
Anonymous wrote:OP, we moved between our quiet DD's 6th and 7th grade years. She is our middle and I worried about her the most - her older sibling is super adaptable and moving in elementary school for her younger siblings seemed like really no big deal.
Our 7th grader has adapted incredibly well. She is very observant and deliberate so the first month was a bit hard while she just mainly watched and tried to get the feel of the girls in her grade, but she has ended up with two such great kind friends and an acquaintance group that has had no drama in all of 7th grade.
So I guess overall my advice would be to encourage her to take her time before jumping into friendships while also being aware that it might be a little hard at first but that it will all work out pretty shortly.
Good luck!