Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She needs to find other friends. What extra curriculars does she do outside of school? She needs to make friends through those and focus on those friends.
OP again. Agree unfortunately doesn’t resolve the problem. She already does that, has other good friends that she hangs out with outside school from sports, prior schools attended. She is well known amongst kids at various area schools. Because she is so nice, she has a good rep and well liked. This is a school friend group specific problem of mean bullying queen bees within a smallish private girls school with very few internal options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even in a smallish private, there are lots of girls who aren’t part of this group. Your daughter could spend time getting to know them.
I’m a teacher and when I have seen this happen, there are usually plenty of perfectly lovely kids who would be happy to be nice to the newly excluded kid. The issue is usually that SHE (or he, my school is coed) isn’t interested in friends who aren’t in the top social tier. Hopefully that’s not your child.
Twice, I’ve been pleased to see an excluded cool kid develop a really nice friendship with a student outside of the clique, only for said cool kid to drop the new friend like a hot potato when the social tables turned and the excluded kid was welcomed back. That was disappointing.
Eh. Many of these "perfectly lovely kids" exclude kids below their own social tier. And they'd happily drop their whole posse if the cool crowd came knocking. People arevas lovely as their options.
Anonymous wrote:Even in a smallish private, there are lots of girls who aren’t part of this group. Your daughter could spend time getting to know them.
I’m a teacher and when I have seen this happen, there are usually plenty of perfectly lovely kids who would be happy to be nice to the newly excluded kid. The issue is usually that SHE (or he, my school is coed) isn’t interested in friends who aren’t in the top social tier. Hopefully that’s not your child.
Twice, I’ve been pleased to see an excluded cool kid develop a really nice friendship with a student outside of the clique, only for said cool kid to drop the new friend like a hot potato when the social tables turned and the excluded kid was welcomed back. That was disappointing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even in a smallish private, there are lots of girls who aren’t part of this group. Your daughter could spend time getting to know them.
I’m a teacher and when I have seen this happen, there are usually plenty of perfectly lovely kids who would be happy to be nice to the newly excluded kid. The issue is usually that SHE (or he, my school is coed) isn’t interested in friends who aren’t in the top social tier. Hopefully that’s not your child.
Twice, I’ve been pleased to see an excluded cool kid develop a really nice friendship with a student outside of the clique, only for said cool kid to drop the new friend like a hot potato when the social tables turned and the excluded kid was welcomed back. That was disappointing.
Yup. This. OP's daughter wants to stay part of the cool girl crowd so she keeps engaging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Consider publics, OP, especially if you can enroll her in her boyfriend's school. Clean fresh start for January 2024.
Thanks. Unfortunately the boyfriend doesn’t go to the school we are zoned for. NYC zoning is weird and complicated. So they wouldn’t go to school together. If she does public, we really have to move. Her class has 45 kids in it. But she might need a bigger school.
Anonymous wrote:Consider publics, OP, especially if you can enroll her in her boyfriend's school. Clean fresh start for January 2024.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for the crowd sourcing. There were a lot of great ideas here and I am going to use many of them. Many angles I had not even considered. Also this situation is clearly not unique and sounds like it happens everywhere. So that is a reality bomb She said she wants to change schools. Which seems to be in line with the advice here. We’ll let her think about it over break. It is competitive here in NYC so we are going to start looking now for hopeful January but def next year.
So how are you going to help your child between now and June?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone for the crowd sourcing. There were a lot of great ideas here and I am going to use many of them. Many angles I had not even considered. Also this situation is clearly not unique and sounds like it happens everywhere. So that is a reality bomb She said she wants to change schools. Which seems to be in line with the advice here. We’ll let her think about it over break. It is competitive here in NYC so we are going to start looking now for hopeful January but def next year.