Anonymous wrote:I actually think there’s way less bullying nowadays. My 5th grade DD is part of the biggest friend group at our local DCPS, but it’s very inclusive adding girls each year and in general gets along well with the other smaller groups of girls in their grade as well as with the big groups the year ahead of them (now graduated) and behind them. The girls are nice to others the majority of the time and to each other virtually all the time.
Anonymous wrote:I remember friends groups being much more co-ed back in my high schools days. How it seems very single gendered. I think friend groups are less drama and more balanced when they are gender mixed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Girls can be nasty. It's starts young and never seems to end (some mom's are just as nasty). I see girls moving between friend groups more often than when I was in HS. My DD has "friends", who seem more like acquaintances at this point (she's a junior). I personally feel the parenting in this area is part of t he problem. I grew up in the Northeast and it was (and still is) much different than what I have seen living in NoVA.
Passive aggressive moms. fake smiling ones. Fruit doesn't fall from...
Social media, texting instead of talking even texting when in same social space. communications and expectations have changed but those humans not so much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Girls can be nasty. It's starts young and never seems to end (some mom's are just as nasty). I see girls moving between friend groups more often than when I was in HS. My DD has "friends", who seem more like acquaintances at this point (she's a junior). I personally feel the parenting in this area is part of t he problem. I grew up in the Northeast and it was (and still is) much different than what I have seen living in NoVA.
Is it more transactional here? That’s what it seems like to me. Or is it a sign of the times in general?
Anonymous wrote:I'm a generation X mom- Growing up I had a very great group of female friendships. There was a lot of bullying that occurred from other kids outside my friendship group that I was wary of-- but I could trust and count on my friends. I grew up in an upper middle class area
DD is 11 and at a public school in a upper middle class area. The pattern I've seen more is different girls within friendship groups creating drama and doing relational bullying.
Not sure if this is just unique to her public school or a larger current generational trend--or maybe I just was lucky with the girls I grew up with.
Anonymous wrote:Girls can be nasty. It's starts young and never seems to end (some mom's are just as nasty). I see girls moving between friend groups more often than when I was in HS. My DD has "friends", who seem more like acquaintances at this point (she's a junior). I personally feel the parenting in this area is part of t he problem. I grew up in the Northeast and it was (and still is) much different than what I have seen living in NoVA.
Anonymous wrote:Girls can be nasty. It's starts young and never seems to end (some mom's are just as nasty). I see girls moving between friend groups more often than when I was in HS. My DD has "friends", who seem more like acquaintances at this point (she's a junior). I personally feel the parenting in this area is part of t he problem. I grew up in the Northeast and it was (and still is) much different than what I have seen living in NoVA.