Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is in 2nd grade? What does mean girl behavior look like at this age? Things like not inviting the whole class to a birthday party? These kids aren’t on social media, so it seems like the teachers, parents and school could get a handle on this behavior pretty quickly.
Even in 2nd grade kids can be very savvy with relational aggression. It's impressive (but obviously not in a good way). And because many teachers and parents think it doesn't happen until later, they overlook it or attribute situations as being "misunderstandings". There is a book called something like- Little Girls Can Be Mean (I don't remember the exact title). It's interesting and offers strategies to parents and kids.
OP, if you've tried different avenues and don't feel like you and your daughter are being supported by the school, you should develop an exit strategy.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would move my kid from a school because of horrible bulling that the school didn't addressed, yes. If it were 7th or 8th though I might wait until 9th because all schools change a great deal when you move to upper school (speaking from experience several times over). If you are specifying a private because you can only switch to public (no openings at private) then I agree that makes the decision much more difficult. It would really depend on how good the pubic was and how long she would be there before the next private school admission cycle. Its a very personal decision with lots of subjective criteria.
This is OP again. Right now we are zoned to Potomac elementary, but I literally would move to anywhere to put her in a school she wasn’t made to feel sad or like she is friendless. Maybe we give the school one more year and if it’s not better by late fall we apply elsewhere or go to public.
Same here.We did. Wish I did it a year sooner than I did.
Anonymous wrote:This is in 2nd grade? What does mean girl behavior look like at this age? Things like not inviting the whole class to a birthday party? These kids aren’t on social media, so it seems like the teachers, parents and school could get a handle on this behavior pretty quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would move my kid from a school because of horrible bulling that the school didn't addressed, yes. If it were 7th or 8th though I might wait until 9th because all schools change a great deal when you move to upper school (speaking from experience several times over). If you are specifying a private because you can only switch to public (no openings at private) then I agree that makes the decision much more difficult. It would really depend on how good the pubic was and how long she would be there before the next private school admission cycle. Its a very personal decision with lots of subjective criteria.
This is OP again. Right now we are zoned to Potomac elementary, but I literally would move to anywhere to put her in a school she wasn’t made to feel sad or like she is friendless. Maybe we give the school one more year and if it’s not better by late fall we apply elsewhere or go to public.
Anonymous wrote:I would move my kid from a school because of horrible bulling that the school didn't addressed, yes. If it were 7th or 8th though I might wait until 9th because all schools change a great deal when you move to upper school (speaking from experience several times over). If you are specifying a private because you can only switch to public (no openings at private) then I agree that makes the decision much more difficult. It would really depend on how good the pubic was and how long she would be there before the next private school admission cycle. Its a very personal decision with lots of subjective criteria.
Anonymous wrote:Private schools are too small. Parents think it's going to be a good thing, more nurturing. It's not. Too small of a peer group. Social options are too limiting. Go public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is OP, my daughter is in 2nd grade.
I see now. I would bet money that you are at St. Pat’s.
Op I would ask is it just the girls or are the parents encouraging the behavior or mean themselves? This can make a difference because if the parents are nice and invested in the community then they will help. If they are part of the problem I would leave.
I agree at our private the mom encourage's the mean girl behavior. She controls who her daughter plays with or has playdates with. She ignores all the other parents who aren't up to her standards and her daughter bullies a lot of the other girls. My DD just ignores and doesn't want to have to do anything with the family. I wish the mom's friends would speak up about this behavior as they all know it is wrong but since it doesn't affect them or their child they don't care.
Is this St. Pats? Sounds similar to a post on another thread.
Really, could you stop? It doesn't matter what school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is OP, my daughter is in 2nd grade.
I see now. I would bet money that you are at St. Pat’s.
Op I would ask is it just the girls or are the parents encouraging the behavior or mean themselves? This can make a difference because if the parents are nice and invested in the community then they will help. If they are part of the problem I would leave.
I agree at our private the mom encourage's the mean girl behavior. She controls who her daughter plays with or has playdates with. She ignores all the other parents who aren't up to her standards and her daughter bullies a lot of the other girls. My DD just ignores and doesn't want to have to do anything with the family. I wish the mom's friends would speak up about this behavior as they all know it is wrong but since it doesn't affect them or their child they don't care.
Is this St. Pats? Sounds similar to a post on another thread.
Anonymous wrote:I regret not moving my DD who is now a senior at a large public HS. High school has been awful for her- mean girls have done some awful bullying. We weren't fully aware of the extent of how bad it was until this year and are counting the days for her to graduate and leave. (she is taking many days off already). We hoped things would get better and they never really did. She is going out college out of state and fingers are crossed that she thrives and makes friends.