Anonymous wrote:I'd say it's bullying.
But honestly, if your 6th grader is crying at school then I can see why she's getting bullied. Not that it should be that way, of course. But you can't show these people weakness. I used to get bullied at that age and it would have been so, so much worse if I'd been crying about it.
You need to work harder on that with her or it won't stop.
Anonymous wrote:It used to be middle school crush behavior. Watch old movies and TV shows. Dip her hair in the ink well, take his hat and run away etc.
Could be one of the boys likes her and is trying to get her attention.
Anonymous wrote:6th grade daughter comes home every day complaining about boys picking on her. They play keep-away with her sweatshirt. They make fun of her appearance. Last week one snatched a pencil from her and threw it out the window and today a different one mocked her for getting upset about it (she's a cryer - we're working on resilience.)
It doesn't seem practical to complain to a teacher for any individual incident. How do you address this kind of thing and not get branded a snitch? Not that I have a problem with snitching in principle, but it's not a life skill, you know?
Thanks for sharing experiences.
Anonymous wrote:OP are you in a public middle school? Or private? I would call start with calling the school. At the middle school I worked at, the correct person to handle it was the vice principal. The counselors would work on reconciling. At the school I worked at, there were not really incidents of this kind of bullying - lots of OTHER incidents, but not a group of boys harassing a girl like this. My friend's dd was at a middle school where stuff like this happened to her dd. She had to pretty much raise hell because that school did not have good procedures for handling it.
If I were you, I would 1) DO NOT CONTACT ANOTHER PARENT 2) Call the school and ask the school secretary which administrator handles bulllying. They will be able to tell you who it is, their name and their email address, and let you leave vm for them. Your dd is being continually targeted by a group of boys from her old school (this doesn't surprise me, BTW) 3) put everything in to writing in to an email, any names she has told you, when these things have happened (between classes, during classes, etc). If your dd says any kids were witnesses, include their names. Your dd is not feeling safe at school. Ask them to speak with your dd. (At the school I worked out, the school policy is to ask the students to provide a written statement of what has happened and how it is affecting them. There is a form for it or kids can do their own. If the school has this process, they will still ask your dd to write it but you should give as much info as you can in writing in yours. 4) for your dd, she may not want you to do this. This is one of those times when you need to do it anyway. She needs to be safe and feel safe at school. If she is not feeling safe then she is not learning. 5) expect that they will interview the kids, talk to the teachers etc to investigate.
Schools have strong policies for this and take it seriously now. Your dd should NOT be terrorized at school. I would hope that the school will handle this well. This is what they do.
Anonymous wrote:She needs to toughen up. This kind of stuff happened all the time. I’d be mortified if mommy had to call the school for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this the same group of boys doing this over and over? It sounds like bullying to me, I'd talk to the school counselor.
It's the boys she's been with since kindergarten, not anyone coming from the other elementaries. And to complicate matters, she was in a small elementary school with a relatively tightly knit parent group. Do I reach out to these boys' parents? One of the worst offenders is the son of a couple we used to socialize with. We sort of drifted apart but I'd still call them friends.
If you feel comfortable reaching out to the parents, I would do that. I had to with an incident with my son. Unfortunately it kind of ended our relationship with the parents as friends, now it just a casual hello. The dad was pretty understanding, but the mom was really hurt. I don't regret it, her son was a real pain in my son's life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this the same group of boys doing this over and over? It sounds like bullying to me, I'd talk to the school counselor.
It's the boys she's been with since kindergarten, not anyone coming from the other elementaries. And to complicate matters, she was in a small elementary school with a relatively tightly knit parent group. Do I reach out to these boys' parents? One of the worst offenders is the son of a couple we used to socialize with. We sort of drifted apart but I'd still call them friends.