Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a public with lots of mom social engineering. It’s not around wealth at all but it does dictate who plays with who. I’ve had to suck it up and deal with some families I don’t care for just so kid can be part of the crew.
Once they get to middle school next year I think/hope it will become less parent driven.
I’m not sure it is social engineering. If a kid is well liked, that kid will be included and invited. If your kid is on the periphery and parents are not part of the school community, that child might not be thought about and invited.
I have 3 kids. My oldest has two friends with divorced parents whose moms are essentially non existent at school. Both boys are very nice boys, athletic and social. I have been driving and paying for the one friend since they were little.
My other kids hang out with mostly involved parents. I don’t pick the friends. My kids pick the friends and I coordinate with parents.
If the kid is shy or weird and parent is weird or antisocial, no one is going out of their way to make plans with these people. If I click or like parents, I may attempt a play date but if kids don’t get along, that friendship is not going anywhere no matter how much I like the parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I often see social engineering mentioned on here. I have heard people say it is about money or status or being popular.
I have three kids. My kids pick their own friends. Sure, when kids were in kindergarten and first grade, it may have mattered slightly if I liked the mom. My youngest is in first grade now and her closest friends are her friends she has chosen, not necessarily the ones of moms I like or want to hang out with.
We are one of the wealthiest families and I absolutely do not care how much money the other family has.
People probably gravitate towards your family but you don’t realize it.
Anonymous wrote:I often see social engineering mentioned on here. I have heard people say it is about money or status or being popular.
I have three kids. My kids pick their own friends. Sure, when kids were in kindergarten and first grade, it may have mattered slightly if I liked the mom. My youngest is in first grade now and her closest friends are her friends she has chosen, not necessarily the ones of moms I like or want to hang out with.
We are one of the wealthiest families and I absolutely do not care how much money the other family has.
Anonymous wrote:We are at a public with lots of mom social engineering. It’s not around wealth at all but it does dictate who plays with who. I’ve had to suck it up and deal with some families I don’t care for just so kid can be part of the crew.
Once they get to middle school next year I think/hope it will become less parent driven.
Anonymous wrote:We no longer attend the same school but there was definitely a group of moms who hung out together and signed their girls up for the same dance and activities. They were rich and cliquey.
I’m very friendly with a few moms in my daughter’s grade and we also sign up for dance together now. This is not some scheme to exclude others. Our daughters are friends, in the same class and both like dance so we signed up together.
A lot of this may be in your head.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t believe this is happening anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how much you're manufacturing this scenario in your head. My kids go to a private school and we are by far not the wealthiest there but everyone is welcoming and our kids have had no trouble making friends. Maybe in K or even first the moms can force it, but my second grade kids have opinions about who they hang out with. Sure, if they don't know your kid then they might not choose to have a play date with her, but they have a ton of interaction at school and it seems to me that that's mostly how alliances are forged. My kids do a different sport than all their classmates and we live in a different area as well but they both still have friends (and have every year). We do play dates when we can, but I'm certainly not trying to manufacture any relationships for my kids nor am I trying to climb any kind of a ladder (seriously, I went to private school and now send my kids and I haven no idea what you're talking about). I really think this is a figment of your imagination. So just relax.