Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child should have stopped with pointers and suggestions and not done any of the work. That is the lesson for your child.
This. The lesson is that your DD, by being a pushover, has been helping your friend's child cheat on homework and now a competition. Your DD needs to stop abetting cheating.
Anonymous wrote:Your child should have stopped with pointers and suggestions and not done any of the work. That is the lesson for your child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s no mention on what the help consisted of. If the other kid spends weeks working on her essay (at least according to your posts) and your child ‘helps’ by bouncing off some ideas and doing minor edits, then there’s no need for additional thanks and acknowledgements. From the other child’s point of view, if the help was coming from her own parents, it would be odd to bring that up multiple times. In fact it would be more appropriate to not mention it at all since the contribution is very small.
You don’t know the full extent of how work was divided in the project and the actual impact your child help was in getting the award. It seems to me you could be overestimating it, and you only go by your possibly biased and jealous opinion if your DD.
I think the lesson you need to teach your child is that sometimes she needs to help people without expecting anything in return and just be happy for her friends success. It seems that being selfish may be the issue why she can’t make friends.
This post is rude and useless. Goodbye.
It is actually a pretty thoughtful and helpful post...until the last sentence. PP really undercut her point at the very end.
The family friend of many years is asking the daughter of the op for help with a project. The friend is ignored several times until she is reluctantly ‘assisted’ whatever that means. After the friend wins an award the daughter is upset she is not thanked publicly enough and her help acknowledged, essentially asking to undermine and understate the contribution and merit of the actual author of the essay. I’m sorry but to me this is a terrible personality trait of selfishness, being self centered and self absorbed and overall being an truly awful friend. By middle school these kids should at least know how to navigate these social interactions, and show some empathy. I don’t think age is a valid excuse. I maintain that this kind of behavior would make it difficult if not impossible to form genuine relations and strong friendship bonds with her peers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s no mention on what the help consisted of. If the other kid spends weeks working on her essay (at least according to your posts) and your child ‘helps’ by bouncing off some ideas and doing minor edits, then there’s no need for additional thanks and acknowledgements. From the other child’s point of view, if the help was coming from her own parents, it would be odd to bring that up multiple times. In fact it would be more appropriate to not mention it at all since the contribution is very small.
You don’t know the full extent of how work was divided in the project and the actual impact your child help was in getting the award. It seems to me you could be overestimating it, and you only go by your possibly biased and jealous opinion if your DD.
I think the lesson you need to teach your child is that sometimes she needs to help people without expecting anything in return and just be happy for her friends success. It seems that being selfish may be the issue why she can’t make friends.
This post is rude and useless. Goodbye.
It is actually a pretty thoughtful and helpful post...until the last sentence. PP really undercut her point at the very end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s no mention on what the help consisted of. If the other kid spends weeks working on her essay (at least according to your posts) and your child ‘helps’ by bouncing off some ideas and doing minor edits, then there’s no need for additional thanks and acknowledgements. From the other child’s point of view, if the help was coming from her own parents, it would be odd to bring that up multiple times. In fact it would be more appropriate to not mention it at all since the contribution is very small.
You don’t know the full extent of how work was divided in the project and the actual impact your child help was in getting the award. It seems to me you could be overestimating it, and you only go by your possibly biased and jealous opinion if your DD.
I think the lesson you need to teach your child is that sometimes she needs to help people without expecting anything in return and just be happy for her friends success. It seems that being selfish may be the issue why she can’t make friends.
This post is rude and useless. Goodbye.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s no mention on what the help consisted of. If the other kid spends weeks working on her essay (at least according to your posts) and your child ‘helps’ by bouncing off some ideas and doing minor edits, then there’s no need for additional thanks and acknowledgements. From the other child’s point of view, if the help was coming from her own parents, it would be odd to bring that up multiple times. In fact it would be more appropriate to not mention it at all since the contribution is very small.
You don’t know the full extent of how work was divided in the project and the actual impact your child help was in getting the award. It seems to me you could be overestimating it, and you only go by your possibly biased and jealous opinion if your DD.
I think the lesson you need to teach your child is that sometimes she needs to help people without expecting anything in return and just be happy for her friends success. It seems that being selfish may be the issue why she can’t make friends.
This post is rude and useless. Goodbye.
Anonymous wrote:DD was identified as gifted from an early age. She has always been a voracious reader and has a natural understanding of mathematical concepts. She is also an introvert which has made making connections with other students more difficult. One thing we have struggled with over the years is dealing with other students who ask for her assistance (answers) with schoolwork. It can be very frustrating for child who wants to form friendships but doesn’t want to feel as if they are being used. Anyway, a friend of DD asked for assistance with a project. DD ignored the request several times and then finally helped this friend. The friend ended up receiving an award for the project. I’m certain this would not have happened without assistance from DD as this other child has struggled in school. The situation wouldn’t bother me so much if the friend had simply said “thank you” to my DD but there has been no acknowledgement to date. Meanwhile, the mother has been boasting to me and others about her DD’s award. Should I let it go or at some point should I mention DD’s significant contribution to the project? I’ve told DD this is a lesson about not sharing work or ideas with others.
Anonymous wrote:There’s no mention on what the help consisted of. If the other kid spends weeks working on her essay (at least according to your posts) and your child ‘helps’ by bouncing off some ideas and doing minor edits, then there’s no need for additional thanks and acknowledgements. From the other child’s point of view, if the help was coming from her own parents, it would be odd to bring that up multiple times. In fact it would be more appropriate to not mention it at all since the contribution is very small.
You don’t know the full extent of how work was divided in the project and the actual impact your child help was in getting the award. It seems to me you could be overestimating it, and you only go by your possibly biased and jealous opinion if your DD.
I think the lesson you need to teach your child is that sometimes she needs to help people without expecting anything in return and just be happy for her friends success. It seems that being selfish may be the issue why she can’t make friends.

Anonymous wrote:There’s no mention on what the help consisted of. If the other kid spends weeks working on her essay (at least according to your posts) and your child ‘helps’ by bouncing off some ideas and doing minor edits, then there’s no need for additional thanks and acknowledgements. From the other child’s point of view, if the help was coming from her own parents, it would be odd to bring that up multiple times. In fact it would be more appropriate to not mention it at all since the contribution is very small.
You don’t know the full extent of how work was divided in the project and the actual impact your child help was in getting the award. It seems to me you could be overestimating it, and you only go by your possibly biased and jealous opinion if your DD.
I think the lesson you need to teach your child is that sometimes she needs to help people without expecting anything in return and just be happy for her friends success. It seems that being selfish may be the issue why she can’t make friends.
Anonymous wrote:How old are these kids? You can’t seriously be that upset that one 8 year old didn’t say thank you to another 8 year old, can you?
Anonymous wrote:I also think you should get a better understanding of how much collaboration the kids are allowed to engage in. They are allowed to share ideas and help each other out. That’s not stealing each other’s work. They usually sit at communal tables. The schools ENCOURAGE that now. I’m concerned that you’re telling your child not to help the other kids, when the teacher is probably telling them to work together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who would you mention your DD's "significant contribution" to?
What outcome would you be trying to achieve?
Suppose you assisted a co-worker with a project that earned them an award and that co-worker never thanked you. How would that make you feel? I’m not jealous about the award. I think it’s a good thing for this student to receive some positive reinforcement. I’m angry that someone DD considered a friend didn’t thank her at all for her help. I think it’s horrible.