Anonymous wrote:A kid in my 8 yo’s class invited all the boys in the class to his birthday except mine and one other boy. I kind of think this is crappy of the mom. Am I being unfair?
Anonymous wrote:2 out of 8.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basically they invited 6 of the 8 boys. I know it wasn’t a mix up bc one of the other boys asked the birthday boy why he hadn’t invited ds and he said it never occurred to him. That’s understandable from an 8 yo boy but not from an adult. Agree I think half the boys would be acceptable - or half the whole class. But leaving out 2 feels crappy. And yes they have been invited to our parties - pre Covid when we had them
Pre-Covid means it was almost two years ago. Friendships change a lot at that age in two years.
Anonymous wrote:I definitely don’t think my kid was mean to this kid. My kid does have adhd and you can tell and this kid has always been extremely mature and self regulating so I’m sure he just thinks my kid is annoying. I do think kids should be able to invite who they want. But I would personally tell my kid either just ask half the boys or all the boys. These kids have been at school together since they were two. Just feels ick. Maybe not wrong but just ick
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no etiquette to whom you must invite to a birthday. It isn't a school party, kids can and should invite who they want.
Now if your son is feeling left out, do your best to foster friendships outside of school. Also, how did he know? If invitations are being passed out at school and parties discussed, I would send a note to the teacher. I know our (private) school has a policy that party invitations are not to be brought and passed out at school and parties outside of school aren't to be talked about if everyone isn't invited. The teachers go over this with the students at the beginning of the year so it is clear. A large public school probably can't control this and doesn't care to, but if your child is at a smaller private school, I think it is appropriate to ask about.
Who does paper invitations?
Everything is online now.
I say this as someone who used to pay someone to design my party invitations and actually mailed them a decade ago.
I can’t remember the last paper party invitation we received and I have 3 kids. Maybe when my oldest was in kindergarten.
Not the pp but I still do paper invites. DD has always liked small parties less than 8 kids and all were her friends in and out of school. So I knew the parents and were able to mail them to the kids. I would never send paper invites to school cause I know it can cause problems. But DD did get a cute paper invite from a school friend that she had done herself with notecards. I thought that was sweet.
Anonymous wrote:Also what type of message are you sending to a kid by asking them to invite a person they don't enjoy being around? I don't spend my weekends or free time with people I don't care for.
Anonymous wrote:There is no etiquette to whom you must invite to a birthday. It isn't a school party, kids can and should invite who they want.
Now if your son is feeling left out, do your best to foster friendships outside of school. Also, how did he know? If invitations are being passed out at school and parties discussed, I would send a note to the teacher. I know our (private) school has a policy that party invitations are not to be brought and passed out at school and parties outside of school aren't to be talked about if everyone isn't invited. The teachers go over this with the students at the beginning of the year so it is clear. A large public school probably can't control this and doesn't care to, but if your child is at a smaller private school, I think it is appropriate to ask about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no etiquette to whom you must invite to a birthday. It isn't a school party, kids can and should invite who they want.
Now if your son is feeling left out, do your best to foster friendships outside of school. Also, how did he know? If invitations are being passed out at school and parties discussed, I would send a note to the teacher. I know our (private) school has a policy that party invitations are not to be brought and passed out at school and parties outside of school aren't to be talked about if everyone isn't invited. The teachers go over this with the students at the beginning of the year so it is clear. A large public school probably can't control this and doesn't care to, but if your child is at a smaller private school, I think it is appropriate to ask about.
Who does paper invitations?
Everything is online now.
I say this as someone who used to pay someone to design my party invitations and actually mailed them a decade ago.
I can’t remember the last paper party invitation we received and I have 3 kids. Maybe when my oldest was in kindergarten.
Anonymous wrote:There is no etiquette to whom you must invite to a birthday. It isn't a school party, kids can and should invite who they want.
Now if your son is feeling left out, do your best to foster friendships outside of school. Also, how did he know? If invitations are being passed out at school and parties discussed, I would send a note to the teacher. I know our (private) school has a policy that party invitations are not to be brought and passed out at school and parties outside of school aren't to be talked about if everyone isn't invited. The teachers go over this with the students at the beginning of the year so it is clear. A large public school probably can't control this and doesn't care to, but if your child is at a smaller private school, I think it is appropriate to ask about.