T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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729.1 | from a first grader's point of view | LEDS::TRIPP | | Tue Apr 26 1994 15:45 | 30 |
| From the other side of the fence is my view. In the beginning of the
school year my we requested that AJ, in the first grade, walk home with
PJ a third grader. His school is grade 1 - 3 only. It was during the
Holly Peranian thing and I was a little more than paranoid to say the
least.
As the year progressed, we found (I actually observed) PJ would come
out of school and just take off, leaving AJ to basically walk alone.
Now my son is one who won't take NO easily, and kept insisting tha PJ
was supposed to walk with him. Usually PJ would decide to take another
street home (there are two possible routes to PJ's home and only one to
our sitter's home) leaving AJ jpretty much to walk alone. When AJ
would insist that he was supposed to be walking with him, which wasn't
a problem initially, PJ would be outright mean. He pushed him into
snowbanks, and puddles, into and over fences, call him mean names,
including "baby first grader". So we simply enforced with AJ to walk
home carefully, not talk to strangers and to walk as close to the side
of the fences as possible. (our town doesn't have sidewalks generally).
I guess I see it from the other side. No it isn't right but kids are
cruel sometimes.
Perhaps your child could be friends with the second grader either while
in school or she could visit with your daugter after school. Our
school will allow a child to go with another child if a note has been
sent spelling out the arrangements in advance. Allowing phone calls
after school would also be a possibility, they could talk without
anyone else knowing.
Hope this helps.
Lyn
|
729.2 | just a little added info | LEDS::TRIPP | | Tue Apr 26 1994 15:47 | 5 |
| I realized I had left out something key here. We had asked PJ before
making arrangements, to walk with AJ to the babysitter's home. The
sitter knows PJ both from the neighborhood and her CCD class. PJ
agreed to help, but things soon changed, as I described.
|
729.3 | | DV780::DORO | Donna Quixote | Tue Apr 26 1994 16:42 | 13 |
|
No answers but some feeling of support.....
I'm interested in both sides of this...
How do you help your child understand why it's not good
to perpetrate this behavior? How do you give them/teach them
strength and support?
How do you help (or not help) when they're the object of this
behavior?
Jamd
|
729.4 | pointer | CUPMK::STEINHART | | Tue Apr 26 1994 16:49 | 3 |
| Please alse see note 441 about coping with other kids' cruel behavior.
Laura
|
729.5 | You'd call them "friends"?? | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Apr 26 1994 17:15 | 38 |
| Could it be that the older kids are trying to "test" your daughter to
see how much power they have over her? As a kid I was left out a lot,
and a lot of times because someone else would harass someone who wanted
to talk to me, so they ended up not talking/playing. I tend to be a
loner anyway, so it wasn't so much a big deal, but it Did hurt.
If my friends tried to give me a hard time about wanting to be friends
with someone else because they were "different" somehow, I would walk
away from the original friends. It seemed to me that if they were
making fun of the "other" girl for some reason, then what was to stop
them from making fun of ME for some equally meaningless reason, to
other kids. A lot of times it cost "friendships" - but those people
really weren't my friends anyway. A lot of other friendships were made
as a result of it, and I ended up being friendly with more people who
readily accepted other people's differences. And THESE are the
friendships that matter most.
Even now, 13 years after high school, I am friends with one of the
first girls who just let me choose my friends in school, and didn't
laugh because those other girls weren't pretty/popular. And those
not-very-pretty/popular girls are the ones who meant the most to me all
through school, and they're the ones I think and wonder about now. Not
the popular girls (heck, I can't even remember their names!).
Perhaps you can impress on your daughter that the value of friendship
(and relationships) comes with ACCEPTING things/people the way they
are. Her older friends should accept that she's friendly with other
people - they don't have to like her younger friend, but if they're her
friend, they should respect her right to have other friends. Did that
make sense??
And if all else fails, maybe you can arrange "secret" times for the
girls to get together that the older girls won't know, and won't harass
her for it. Kids are so cruel!
|
729.6 | | DELNI::DISMUKE | | Wed Apr 27 1994 10:45 | 16 |
| A thought I had as I was reading some of the replies.
You child needs to make up her own mind about what she is to do, but
along the same lines, you as a parent need to give her the information
she needs to make that decision.
My suggestion would be to have a discussion with her about why the
other kids are pushing her to do what they want, does she want to be
their puppet, how does the 2nd grader feel, etc. She needs to know
that whatever decision she makes, she made it will as much
understanding as she could.
It may not be pretty, but she has to own this one.
-sandy
|
729.7 | 'having' friends<->'being' friends? | UTROP1::BEL_M | Michel Bel@UTO - Telecommie | Thu Apr 28 1994 04:57 | 3 |
| A thought, maybe, if this might help:
What about talking about the difference of 'having' friends, as
compared to 'being' a friend?
|
729.9 | | LATVMS::BRANAM | | Thu Apr 28 1994 14:13 | 8 |
| As adults we ignore minor differences in age, but as kids I remember things
being rigidly defined by age. Kids spend most of their time segregated by
age, and a year of difference seems to them an impossible gulf. When it
represents 10-20% of your entire life, including your physical and emotional
development, maybe it is. Plus, kids are always encouraged to show how
well they are growing up. Associating with younger kids might seem to be
regressive to them (though we see that it is grown-up to show signs of
responsibility to take care of the younger ones).
|
729.10 | thanks for the advice | TLE::BEGIN::SEIGEL | | Tue May 03 1994 09:52 | 15 |
| Thanks for the helpful advice. I had my daughter read .5 and she
thought it made a lot of sense. I also told her that the 3 kids who
were pressuring her would ultimately respect her more if she did not
give in to them.
My daughter stuck by her younger friend but paid a dear short-term
price for doing so. The situation was resolved by the 3 kids mothers
stepping in and correcting their kids behavior.
re. 9 - Minor differences in ages are probably more important in
school than in the neighborhood, where age differences often get
overlooked because of a lack of kids ones own age.
Harold
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729.11 | | KOALA::SYSTEM | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed May 04 1994 15:14 | 6 |
| Harold,
Glad to hear things have worked out for her! I hope this helps the
friendship between the girls become stronger.
Patty
|