Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They usually have catty mothers.
This is what I see in my kid's peer group (mixed b/g)
Yes to catty moms and sisters and typically no brothers.
Beware the mom of all girls. These moms are social engineers and hyper competitive among their own mom friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would those of you with kids in MS or who have go through it recently say that bullying is talked about more? Handled better by the school? When I was growing up, it was brushed under the table by teachers.
Kids are ANGELS compared to the kids of 70s, 80s. Bullying, hazing, fighting was so much more common and completely tolerated by administrators. Maybe it’s just where I live (not in DMV), but kids are overall much nicer and inclusive now. They get trained on bullying & inclusiveness starting in K. I know there are jerk kids, but overall middle school girls today (from what I’ve seen) are nothing compared to the nastiness that used to exist. Although this could vary from district to district.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They usually have catty mothers.
This is what I see in my kid's peer group (mixed b/g)
Yes to catty moms and sisters and typically no brothers.
Beware the mom of all girls. These moms are social engineers and hyper competitive among their own mom friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So how do I help my son to not be the target? He is cute and fit, but not too sporty and a bit nerdy. He is free to choose whatever brands he wants to wear (doesn’t have much interest yet, 5th grade).
He is smart but not an excellent student. He is up to speed with all the memes and videogames lol.
I try to be supportive of him at home but it looks like so many kids just suffer in silence![]()
It's much much easier for boys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would those of you with kids in MS or who have go through it recently say that bullying is talked about more? Handled better by the school? When I was growing up, it was brushed under the table by teachers.
Kids are ANGELS compared to the kids of 70s, 80s. Bullying, hazing, fighting was so much more common and completely tolerated by administrators. Maybe it’s just where I live (not in DMV), but kids are overall much nicer and inclusive now. They get trained on bullying & inclusiveness starting in K. I know there are jerk kids, but overall middle school girls today (from what I’ve seen) are nothing compared to the nastiness that used to exist. Although this could vary from district to district.
Anonymous wrote:Not a rhetorical question. Sometimes I just get so exhausted by the seventh grade drama I need a good dose of the psychology behind the poor behavior to get perspective. Thank you!!
Anonymous wrote:Would those of you with kids in MS or who have go through it recently say that bullying is talked about more? Handled better by the school? When I was growing up, it was brushed under the table by teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Would those of you with kids in MS or who have go through it recently say that bullying is talked about more? Handled better by the school? When I was growing up, it was brushed under the table by teachers.
Anonymous wrote:It's a horrible time for kids generally. I don't know if boys pick on each other as much directly, but have definitely caught my son making excuses to try to avoid hanging out with a kid that lives near us that he views as uncool. I've spoken to him multiple times about kindness, but his response is that he isn't being unkind - he's being polite, but doesn't want to be friends.
That isn't necessarily bullying. Yes, it would be ideal if all kids could just get along and play/hang out with everyone but that isn't realistic. As long as your son is being polite "sorry, something suddenly came up and I can't hang out with you today" and not being mean to the kid "you are so lame! I don't want to hang out with you", that is normal and shouldn't be construed as bullying or even being mean.
Oh, I 100 percent agree that it isn't bullying, but I do think it is being a bit mean.
Anonymous wrote:So how do I help my son to not be the target? He is cute and fit, but not too sporty and a bit nerdy. He is free to choose whatever brands he wants to wear (doesn’t have much interest yet, 5th grade).
He is smart but not an excellent student. He is up to speed with all the memes and videogames lol.
I try to be supportive of him at home but it looks like so many kids just suffer in silence![]()
Anonymous wrote:Would those of you with kids in MS or who have go through it recently say that bullying is talked about more? Handled better by the school? When I was growing up, it was brushed under the table by teachers.