Anonymous wrote:OP something similar happened to me in middle school. The cheerleaders were outside greeting carpool one morning and when they saw me getting out of the car they stopped waving their signs and turned away (small school- I was the only person getting dropped off). I was so busy staring at the ground and walking around the back of the car to avoid them I didn’t notice, but my mom did and then called the school. They got read the riot act (to the point of tears) by the principal and had to personally apologize to me. I was pretty embarrassed that my mom did that at the time, but now I’m glad they were told off. [/u]They were awful to me for years.
[u]
Point being, it’s not in your head. And it’s mean and kids can be mean.
Anonymous wrote:I would have just calmly explained to her that she is ‘here to help the other children’ and let it sink in.
If you don’t want to do that, call the teacher that supervised the patrols and have a chat. That teacher will then talk to this girl. She is young but she can learn - just help her by doing one of these two things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL. Your son won't be any better when he gets to her age. Let it go OP.
What? No - you’re supposed to raise your children, not ‘let everything go’ and release self absorbed useless assholes on the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son this morning struggled with his backpack in carpool line. The girl that was the patrol who was supposed to help gave him the biggest mean girl smirk to a friend as he entered the building. I wanted to roll down my window and say STOP...
This is just a rant but I just don't understand why kids feel the need to be mean.
Why do you think it was a mean girl smirk and not a "why do these little kids have to carry so much stuff in their giant bookbags" grimace? Or a "we're almost through!" half-smile. Or an "I am so worried about the math test I have to take as soon as I get inside of the building" stress smile?
Do you have experience with the girl where she treats kids badly? Is this because you think she should have been doing something other than she was, and her smile sent you over the edge?
Such BS - yes, let’s second guess our ‘read’ of a 5th grader because that is ‘oh so complicated’ (really?) and just curl up into a little ball of self doubt and do nothing. Have you ever thought of becoming an adult?
Anonymous wrote:I would have just calmly explained to her that she is ‘here to help the other children’ and let it sink in.
If you don’t want to do that, call the teacher that supervised the patrols and have a chat. That teacher will then talk to this girl. She is young but she can learn - just help her by doing one of these two things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son this morning struggled with his backpack in carpool line. The girl that was the patrol who was supposed to help gave him the biggest mean girl smirk to a friend as he entered the building. I wanted to roll down my window and say STOP...
This is just a rant but I just don't understand why kids feel the need to be mean.
Why do you think it was a mean girl smirk and not a "why do these little kids have to carry so much stuff in their giant bookbags" grimace? Or a "we're almost through!" half-smile. Or an "I am so worried about the math test I have to take as soon as I get inside of the building" stress smile?
Do you have experience with the girl where she treats kids badly? Is this because you think she should have been doing something other than she was, and her smile sent you over the edge?
Anonymous wrote:LOL. Your son won't be any better when he gets to her age. Let it go OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP and her defenders must know nothing about 4th and 5th graders - they spend most of their day rolling their eyes and smirking.
Those kids need to learn how to conduct themselves. They clearly lack respect and character. By fourth grade, they should have both -or at least know how to fake it in public.
Anonymous wrote:The OP and her defenders must know nothing about 4th and 5th graders - they spend most of their day rolling their eyes and smirking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son this morning struggled with his backpack in carpool line. The girl that was the patrol who was supposed to help gave him the biggest mean girl smirk to a friend as he entered the building. I wanted to roll down my window and say STOP...
This is just a rant but I just don't understand why kids feel the need to be mean.
Why do you think it was a mean girl smirk and not a "why do these little kids have to carry so much stuff in their giant bookbags" grimace? Or a "we're almost through!" half-smile. Or an "I am so worried about the math test I have to take as soon as I get inside of the building" stress smile?
Do you have experience with the girl where she treats kids badly? Is this because you think she should have been doing something other than she was, and her smile sent you over the edge?
Anonymous wrote:The best thing you can do is to teach your son how to handle situations like this. This will not be the first time this will happen.
Anonymous wrote:My son this morning struggled with his backpack in carpool line. The girl that was the patrol who was supposed to help gave him the biggest mean girl smirk to a friend as he entered the building. I wanted to roll down my window and say STOP...
This is just a rant but I just don't understand why kids feel the need to be mean.