Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think cool and popular are two very different things. For those who remember Beverly Hills, 90210: Steve Sanders was popular while Dylan McKay was cool.
So true!
Anonymous wrote:I think cool and popular are two very different things. For those who remember Beverly Hills, 90210: Steve Sanders was popular while Dylan McKay was cool.
Anonymous wrote:Kids are born cool. Honestly.
Anonymous wrote:Most of the cool kids in middle and high school blossomed early and went on to be lame adults. Not so bad to blossom late and to spend more time developing a few good friends and passions with no concern for public opinion.
Anonymous wrote:They tend to be good looking and have money. They often have deeper roots in the community. Being outgoing helps as well -- introverts by their nature are less likely to be "cool."
Anonymous wrote:I was part of the popular crowd in HS and I would say the main “cool” girl was pretty, funny but not a clown, smart and talented in a few areas, and was not particularly sensitive. She just had kind of an “above it all” vibe. Within the popular group, girls were generally good looking and smart but some were athletic, some more ‘edgy’ etc etc.
I do not think money or cool parents mattered at all. I do remember one girl who had a mother who seemed weirdly involved and invested and it looked desperate.
Anonymous wrote:I worked at the same preschool both of my kids attended - so I literally followed quite a few kids from preschool through HS. I can tell you that the pecking order and personalities start to take shape at three. It seems a combination of confidence, coordination, an outgoing nature on the part of both parent and child, grooming and ease at which activities are picked up. Then, on top of a child’s disposition, there is always one child that begins to decide who plays and who does not. It is pretty much as simple as that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, OP is probably at a private school. This does not seem like a public school thing. At least not at my public school. Thank God.
What, there no popular kid cliques on public school? Sure, ok.
Not really. The middle schools are too large. Cool Kid cllques only work where everyone knows everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:They tend to be good looking and have money. They often have deeper roots in the community. Being outgoing helps as well -- introverts by their nature are less likely to be "cool."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kids are asking each other as dates to the 5th grade dance? Aren't dances at that age supposed to be about everyone just being there together? I would be more concerned about this than who is cool--this seems way too early to start worrying about who has a date and who doesn't--they shouldn't be "dating" at that age.
FWIW, I was most definitely NOT a "cool" kid, but even I remember passing "will you be my boyfriend/girlfriend" notes in 4th-5th grade. Totally meaningless, we didn't go anywhere! But this was a 1980s public school.