Anonymous wrote:Call the counselor directly. Seriously. Do it tomorrow. Let your daughter be mad at you. She doesn’t understand how much this could help both of them.
Print out the messages and mail them to her parents, with a note that it’s from you and your phone number.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of messages?
I would push my child to fill out a bullying form and make a formal complaint to the counselor, but if she really doesn't want to, then I would do it myself. This is middle school, after all, not college.
But is this happening while at school or on school time?
Or is it happening at home, on weekends and outside of school hours.
If it is outside of school hours the the parents need to get involved.
Do you know the girl and her parents OP?
When this kind of thing happened to my niece, my BIL took the phone away from her, and the next time one of those texts came in he reaponded with "Hi Larla. This is Mr. P and this is my phone. I have screen shots of your texts, and if this continues I will forward them to your parents."
This stopped it cold.
The parents knew each other and the girl did not want her parents to see what she has been sending.
All of it was happening outside of school hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of messages?
I would push my child to fill out a bullying form and make a formal complaint to the counselor, but if she really doesn't want to, then I would do it myself. This is middle school, after all, not college.
But is this happening while at school or on school time?
Or is it happening at home, on weekends and outside of school hours.
If it is outside of school hours the the parents need to get involved.
Do you know the girl and her parents OP?
When this kind of thing happened to my niece, my BIL took the phone away from her, and the next time one of those texts came in he reaponded with "Hi Larla. This is Mr. P and this is my phone. I have screen shots of your texts, and if this continues I will forward them to your parents."
This stopped it cold.
The parents knew each other and the girl did not want her parents to see what she has been sending.
All of it was happening outside of school hours.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20:32 and 20:45 here. Obviously, none of the previous posters actually looked at the website or its links.
The school is OBLIGATED BY LAW to respond to bullying when it involves a protected class member being bullied on the basis of race, religion, disability, etc. If they fail to respond appropriately, both the DOE and DOJ can get involved.
They are not the first step. However, it is not something that can be brushed under the rug, because public schools are accountable to higher legal authorities.
What if OPs daughter is not a protected class?
In this area the most popular girl in school coukd easily be a person of color or a protected group, and OPs daughter could be white.
Then the DOJ would not get involved.
Even if the bullying is racist in nature and the girl is in a minoroty group at her school?
Anonymous wrote:Schools are not general teenage police forces and if the behavior is not school-related, it is not clear why you would want to involve them or why they would get involved. You definitely should not involve the school because you do not want to confront the parents, that is your job not theirs. If there is a school connection, and there sometimes is, then it may be appropriate to involve the school. Just my two cents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20:32 and 20:45 here. Obviously, none of the previous posters actually looked at the website or its links.
The school is OBLIGATED BY LAW to respond to bullying when it involves a protected class member being bullied on the basis of race, religion, disability, etc. If they fail to respond appropriately, both the DOE and DOJ can get involved.
They are not the first step. However, it is not something that can be brushed under the rug, because public schools are accountable to higher legal authorities.
What if OPs daughter is not a protected class?
In this area the most popular girl in school coukd easily be a person of color or a protected group, and OPs daughter could be white.
Then the DOJ would not get involved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20:32 and 20:45 here. Obviously, none of the previous posters actually looked at the website or its links.
The school is OBLIGATED BY LAW to respond to bullying when it involves a protected class member being bullied on the basis of race, religion, disability, etc. If they fail to respond appropriately, both the DOE and DOJ can get involved.
They are not the first step. However, it is not something that can be brushed under the rug, because public schools are accountable to higher legal authorities.
What if OPs daughter is not a protected class?
In this area the most popular girl in school coukd easily be a person of color or a protected group, and OPs daughter could be white.
Anonymous wrote:20:32 and 20:45 here. Obviously, none of the previous posters actually looked at the website or its links.
The school is OBLIGATED BY LAW to respond to bullying when it involves a protected class member being bullied on the basis of race, religion, disability, etc. If they fail to respond appropriately, both the DOE and DOJ can get involved.
They are not the first step. However, it is not something that can be brushed under the rug, because public schools are accountable to higher legal authorities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:20:32 here. OP! Please check out this website: https://www.stopbullying.gov/laws/index.html
At the bottom of the page are links to when bullying may overlap with harassment of a protected class.
The Department of Education and the DOJ both can get involved.
Start wtih the school counselor before you call in the DOJ!
Right! Jesus Christ. No need to be a complete drama queen about the situation.
Scared the shit out of you, huh? white privilege much?