Anonymous wrote:My DD is low-drama and found a group of very nice, low-drama friends. Hope your DD can do the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is not universal, particularly if your child and their friend group do not strive to be popular.
This pretty much.
+1 million
Anonymous wrote:I have an 11th grade girl and no, we’ve never had to deal with this. Have you read queen bees and wannabes? If your kid is around that group or wants to be, yes, there’s drama. If your kid avoids the drama, there are plenty of girls who don’t act like that. Teach your kid that if someone is being purposefully mean, they’re not your friend - she should seek out other friends who are kind.
But I will say some of it is also just humans being social beings - I’ve heard girls and moms complain of mean girl behavior, but the details of the story are just the other girl not acting the way the mom or girl thinks she should act.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is not universal, particularly if your child and their friend group do not strive to be popular.
This pretty much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a generalization. My child and her friends were not like this. I am sure it happens, but not everywhere. I am so sorry for kids of both genders who have difficult middle school experiences.
It is everywhere. But most kids are not involved in it and don’t even know it’s happening.
Most kids are not involved? Sure most kids aren't involved in all the drama all the time but I've never seen a friend group not experience some drama. This just shows some people have no idea what goes on at school all day to be so clueless.
This! The other day I listed to the mother of the #1 mean, excluding girl wax poetic about beautiful friendships our kids are developing. She included me i.e. my kid there; I just don't think she has any idea about what is going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 7th at a K-8. I think
The dynamic is different because while the MS curriculum is different and class schedule is MS style it’s not a whole new school. Some kids come and go but generally we don’t have huge drama issues. There are different groups bif kids seem to mesh back and forth depending on who’s in their classes etc. Hopefully it won’t change next year.
I also went to a (small) K-8 and everything OP describes is spot-on.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 7th at a K-8. I think
The dynamic is different because while the MS curriculum is different and class schedule is MS style it’s not a whole new school. Some kids come and go but generally we don’t have huge drama issues. There are different groups bif kids seem to mesh back and forth depending on who’s in their classes etc. Hopefully it won’t change next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a generalization. My child and her friends were not like this. I am sure it happens, but not everywhere. I am so sorry for kids of both genders who have difficult middle school experiences.
It is everywhere. But most kids are not involved in it and don’t even know it’s happening.
Most kids are not involved? Sure most kids aren't involved in all the drama all the time but I've never seen a friend group not experience some drama. This just shows some people have no idea what goes on at school all day to be so clueless.
This! The other day I listed to the mother of the #1 mean, excluding girl wax poetic about beautiful friendships our kids are developing. She included me i.e. my kid there; I just don't think she has any idea about what is going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a generalization. My child and her friends were not like this. I am sure it happens, but not everywhere. I am so sorry for kids of both genders who have difficult middle school experiences.
It is everywhere. But most kids are not involved in it and don’t even know it’s happening.
Most kids are not involved? Sure most kids aren't involved in all the drama all the time but I've never seen a friend group not experience some drama. This just shows some people have no idea what goes on at school all day to be so clueless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is not universal, particularly if your child and their friend group do not strive to be popular.
This pretty much.
Anonymous wrote:It is not universal, particularly if your child and their friend group do not strive to be popular.