Anonymous wrote:This happened to my DD this year. She came home and told me that a girl in her class had a party and invited all of the girls except her. I felt so terrible for her. She is so little still, and was just so sad. It hurt my heart. And this was after my DD had invited ALL of the girls to her party. Even still, though, when next year's birthday comes around, DD knows she will invite everyone again.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree with letting the child dictate the guest list. At this age, she should not be allowed to exclude kids. A 5-year-old may not have the capacity for empathy and may choose not to invite because of trivial reasons (talks with a lisp, colors poorly, etc.) When kids are older and develop deeper friendships, they start having smaller parties where the closest friends are invited. Until then, the entire class, or at least the same gender children, should be invited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a million reasons your daughter didn't get invited. Maybe your email was typed in wrong and they think you never replied. It is only the beginning of the kids choosing actual friends instead of whole class parties. My son had invited kids to find out later he isn't invited to theirs. He has also received invitations and felt bad because he forgot to include someone he wished he did. He's older than K and buddies are in all different classes. Some parents I know, some I don't. Invite anyone your daughter wants and if you are unsure invite the whole class or at least all of the girls.
This. I mistakenly excluded a kid that was in my son's class because I had an out of date class list. It was only later that I realized it and felt terrible. In your situation, it could have been an honest mistake. But even if it wasn't, excluding this girl is sending the wrong message to your daughter. Be bigger than that.
Anonymous wrote:There are a million reasons your daughter didn't get invited. Maybe your email was typed in wrong and they think you never replied. It is only the beginning of the kids choosing actual friends instead of whole class parties. My son had invited kids to find out later he isn't invited to theirs. He has also received invitations and felt bad because he forgot to include someone he wished he did. He's older than K and buddies are in all different classes. Some parents I know, some I don't. Invite anyone your daughter wants and if you are unsure invite the whole class or at least all of the girls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is 5.5. There is this girl in her class who had a bday party earlier in the year. DD knew and was quite upset about not being invited to the party, which was pretty fabulous by all accounts. Most of the time in our school the whole class is invited to a birthday party, or at least all kids of the same gender. money/space was not an issue for these guys.. It seems like the girls play together at school and the friend's name comes up fairly often. DD's birthday is approaching and I really would like to not invite this other girl. I think her parents were rude in excluding my kid, and I feel no obligation to have her. DD goes between saying I wont invite her, and I'd like to invite her.
is it childish of me? is it fair? i am leaning towards telling dd, we will only have your friends who have invited you to their birthdays...
Now this is a self licking ice cream cone if I have ever seen one. If everyone takes that policy, no one would new would ever be invited or included. And you have no idea what the other parent's motivation is. Petty, small, bad role model, and ahh.
You just sound awful. I wonder if YOU are the reason your daughter wasn't invited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I disagree with letting the child dictate the guest list. At this age, she should not be allowed to exclude kids. A 5-year-old may not have the capacity for empathy and may choose not to invite because of trivial reasons (talks with a lisp, colors poorly, etc.) When kids are older and develop deeper friendships, they start having smaller parties where the closest friends are invited. Until then, the entire class, or at least the same gender children, should be invited.
What if you have 26 kids in your K class and your kid was at a different school the previous couple of years and has friends from that school? So the old friends get discarded? DD was able to invite half of her class this year. But she doesn't play with all the girls b/c she's sporty and likes Star Wars and doesn't do tea parties and some of the other things some of the girls do. So she was allowed to choose 13 kids combined from her class (and basketball team, which is made up of kids in the class), plus 5 friends from her previous school. She was thoughtful about her choice and in the end asked us for a 14th kid b/c it turned out, given the logistics, one boy at her table wouldn't have been invited and she didn't want him to be upset.