Anonymous wrote:This is why you don’t listen to others who say schools “ are bad” without getting specific reasons. Your kid may have been happy continuing on in public.
Bad is usually a code word for too many people of color go there. White people don’t like it so consider it a bad school and spread that rumor.
Having said that, in your situation if she is already accepted at the new school I would consider letting her homeschool from now then through the summer. I’d keep it up over the summer too. It’s only a couple of hours a day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, she needs to stick it out. Maybe this seems unfathomable to you and her, but I and plenty of others have sat by themselves at various grade levels. I vividly remember sitting BY MYSELF WITH A BOOK on certain days. Yes, there are literally other options for your kid - she doesn't need to sit with people she doesn't have a good rapport with. She can reach out to others. She just isn't used to being the odd one out.
Wake up, OP and kid. This is very minor, in the grand scheme of things. Better to live through this in high school and build social resilience rather than later.
It's one thing to be left out and another to be the target of malicious gossip
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask about alternate places to eat lunch. If that doesn’t work, finish the year at public (maybe she will make some friends too).
This. She's being bullied. See if the school will let her eat lunch in a classroom or volunteer in the library.
It would be great academically for her to finish her classes rather than switching to virtual. If lunch is the main issue, that seems like there could be solves. But I'd also work on finding her other social outlets so she can make friends outside of school. She'll feel better about school if she has other friends to see on nights and weekends. Those girls will be less likely to get under her skin.
Anonymous wrote:Ask about alternate places to eat lunch. If that doesn’t work, finish the year at public (maybe she will make some friends too).
Anonymous wrote:Freshman year is very difficult for a lot of girls and the private really should be doing more in looking out for her. Is there no safe place for her to eat lunch for the next two months? A classroom? I'd talk to the administration about how she's feeling and see what they can do.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I would let her. I was bullied and it was hell on earth. I would not let my child stay someplace where she was that miserable. Mental health matters. Years from now she won’t remember the bit of the curriculum she missed, but she will remember that her happiness was important to you.