Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they mocking him online or in person to his face? My answers would be different.
Not to his face, but behind him. Wild that some high school kids and families enjoy collecting each other’s GPAs and activities and then ranking and stacking everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you deal with obnoxious kids who constantly brag about their achievements—especially when they’re clearly doing it just to look good on college applications?
My DC is pretty laid-back, but somehow school peers found some of his activities online and started mocking him with comments like “that’s nothing” or “I’m better than you,” etc.
It’s frustrating, and these behaviors seem especially prevalent in certain groups.
You deal the same as with any other type of bullying. Report it to school.
Schools do nothing, especially if the teacher is the bully.
Anonymous wrote:You need to let it go like your kid has. The kids sound like jerks but if your son is not bothered by it you really need to learn to just let it roll off your shoulders too. Don't make it worse for him by getting so upset over it.
- Coming from someone who easily lets things roll off my back with a mother who is the opposite. She often created more stress for me than the situation I was meant to be upset about.
Anonymous wrote:How do you deal with obnoxious kids who constantly brag about their achievements—especially when they’re clearly doing it just to look good on college applications?
My DC is pretty laid-back, but somehow school peers found some of his activities online and started mocking him with comments like “that’s nothing” or “I’m better than you,” etc.
It’s frustrating, and these behaviors seem especially prevalent in certain groups.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you deal with obnoxious kids who constantly brag about their achievements—especially when they’re clearly doing it just to look good on college applications?
My DC is pretty laid-back, but somehow school peers found some of his activities online and started mocking him with comments like “that’s nothing” or “I’m better than you,” etc.
It’s frustrating, and these behaviors seem especially prevalent in certain groups.
You deal the same as with any other type of bullying. Report it to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you deal with obnoxious kids who constantly brag about their achievements—especially when they’re clearly doing it just to look good on college applications?
My DC is pretty laid-back, but somehow school peers found some of his activities online and started mocking him with comments like “that’s nothing” or “I’m better than you,” etc.
It’s frustrating, and these behaviors seem especially prevalent in certain groups.
This sounds like a rich, private school problem.
No, sounds like the opposite: a suburban public with a lot of Asian families,
the kids at top privates don't load up on extracurriculars and honestly there is very little talk about college among the kids at all. a huge number of families don't care that much because it doesn't matter where their kid goes to college: they are stepping into jobs due to connections, etc. I've seen it play out several times. money gives the ability to not care: send that kid to Amherst to study English or Brown to study Peace Studies or Wharton for business or SMU for business. none of it matters to these kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you deal with obnoxious kids who constantly brag about their achievements—especially when they’re clearly doing it just to look good on college applications?
My DC is pretty laid-back, but somehow school peers found some of his activities online and started mocking him with comments like “that’s nothing” or “I’m better than you,” etc.
It’s frustrating, and these behaviors seem especially prevalent in certain groups.
This sounds like a rich, private school problem.
Anonymous wrote:My kid has full permission to punch another kid in the face if needed. We have been hitting the heavy bag in the garage since he was like 7.