Anonymous wrote:5th grade teacher here who will spend today dealing with the fallout from a group text chat. Multiple sets of irate parents who somehow want school to fix issues that came from their children’s unmonitored interactions outside of school hours.
Please please please don’t allow your child to be part of this. Nothing good comes of 10- and 11-year-olds in a group chat.
Anonymous wrote:I’m trying to come up with a single reason for letting a kid group chat who isn’t even a teen and I’m coming up with absolutely nothing. I can’t believe how bad parenting is these days. I really pity the kids. And teachers.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't let my kid on in the first place (and haven't!), but hell yes I would remove.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it's bullying and not roasting where it's fun and the children are in on the joke?
Is there a difference?
I'm a parent of a 5th grader and right away wondered the same thing -- especially since your son said everyone was doing it. Bullying and roasting between friends are of course not the same thing! I think the friends roasting each other is so weird, but I'm a middle age woman, not an 11 year old boy. It's super common amongst 5th grade boys when friends get together (in person, not just in a chat). And yes, they actually call it "roasting". Maybe this group chat is your first exposure to it? It is jarring.
No kid needs to be on a big group chat, though, so remove him if you want. They are always dumb and vapid. Tell him he can make a smaller text group with his closer friends.
Obviously if actual bullying is occurring then that is different...
I understand, from looking at the messsages it does look like its "roasting" the problem is the school will see it the same way we do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it's bullying and not roasting where it's fun and the children are in on the joke?
Is there a difference?
I'm a parent of a 5th grader and right away wondered the same thing -- especially since your son said everyone was doing it. Bullying and roasting between friends are of course not the same thing! I think the friends roasting each other is so weird, but I'm a middle age woman, not an 11 year old boy. It's super common amongst 5th grade boys when friends get together (in person, not just in a chat). And yes, they actually call it "roasting". Maybe this group chat is your first exposure to it? It is jarring.
No kid needs to be on a big group chat, though, so remove him if you want. They are always dumb and vapid. Tell him he can make a smaller text group with his closer friends.
Obviously if actual bullying is occurring then that is different...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it's bullying and not roasting where it's fun and the children are in on the joke?
Is there a difference?