Photo by: Tom Burndred

Is My Child an Outcast?

by "An Anonymous Mom"
Photo by: Tom Burndred

This has been a tough fourth grade year for my Emma. She was so excited at the beginning of the year to be in class with her BFF. They had never been in class together before and had always wanted to. Their wish came true.

I, on the other hand, was apprehensive. This “BFF” that she has been friends with since she was two years old has always treated Emma poorly. She is more aggressive and bossy toward her, tends to not be fully truthful when faced with something she’s done to be hurtful and is hot and cold on whether she’s “in the mood” to include Emma in her games. To me, this is not what a best friend is all about.

The beginning of the year started out ok, but then slowly things started to change. A few mean statements, a few moments of exclusion… then Emma’s BFF was transported to the top of the cool girl hierarchy and Emma was painfully alone at the bottom. Now all the kids treat her that way.

The dynamics of the class are tough. There are only 8 girls and as I mentioned in a previous post, they are ALL very good at sports. They all love fashion and music. They make fun of anything they consider “babyish” like High School Musical or Hannah Montana. They watch what you wear and how often. They watch what you eat and make sure that if it’s something different or weird that the whole table knows about it. They fight among themselves frequently and treat one another poorly.

Emma doesn’t fit in with that group at all. Her BFF has done everything possible this year TO fit in, even if it means stepping on Emma in the process. Now the group of girls has formulated some sort of pact to not let Emma join them in any activity. First it was gym class. There is an even number of girls so when they have to partner up she always ends up with someone, but if they have to go in groups of three – that’s when no one will let her in. Then it was in class when they had to form groups to read a play aloud. No one would let her join their group and actually had to be forced by the teacher to let her in. Then yesterday it was in music. They were playing a game and the music teacher announced groups of four. So Emma went to the group of girls with three that included her BFF and was told she couldn’t join them by the “leader” of all the mean girls. Emma ended up in tears and the teacher did nothing to correct the mean girl behavior, instead she put Emma in an already formed group of four. She said to Emma at the end of class she was sorry, she knew how girls could be to each other.

It’s hard to believe in third grade Emma was given the award by their teacher as “Most Confidence.” Third grade had different girl drama. That year she had a friend in class with her that was very possessive and over-bearing. She wouldn’t let Emma play with other kids without a fight. She did everything possible to stand next to her in line and sit next to her at lunch. She also did things to tease her relentlessly, like hide her pencils, move her chair to the other side of the room, take her apple from her lunchbox and play catch with it… in other words it drove Emma crazy and we were so glad to be out of that dynamic.

But I think I would prefer possessiveness to exclusion any day. At least with possessiveness the problem is that you are liked “too much” instead of not liked at all.

Emma has no problem making friends. In fact she has a ton of girlfriends and has sleepovers and playdates every weekend. I keep reminding her that she has friends who treat her right, who care about her and who will always be there for her. It’s just that these friends are not in her class this year.

What can I do to help her through this? I sent a note to the teacher yesterday and informed her of all the recent episodes. I asked if she has noticed anything and also if she sees any reason that Emma is treated this way. I told her that we are just going to try our best to make it through the next two weeks without anymore tears and that next year she really needs to be in a class with a better dynamic. I named the worst perpetrators so that the teacher could make sure that she was not in class with them again. At this point I don’t care who her teacher is. All I care about is who is hopefully NOT in class with her. This includes the BFF who has not stuck up for her or tried in anyway shape or form to include her. In fact it was her who initially wouldn’t let her join in gym class back in December. Maybe I’m being harsh, but I really feel she is at the root of the problem. She established her dominance over her by letting the other kids see that even the BFF could exclude her and treat her poorly. The rest of the class is following her example.

Then when no one’s watching the BFF invites Emma for a sleepover.

Two weeks of school left…

An Anonymous Mom maintains a candid, uncensored, on-line journal of a typical middle class mom. She has two daughters, a part time professional job, a hard working husband and she volunteers a ton. According to her, “We are over-scheduled and under-financed… Like I said…typical!”

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194 Comments

I'm so sorry you're Emma is going through all this.I have gone through this at many levels. 1.Personally. Oh, how I dreaded going to school, high school was the worse. I wasn't the popular kid; more of a book worm and was constantly tormented. 2.Both of my children were subjected to such in grade school, ended up putting them in a different system, as it got to be unbearable. Things got better. Not great, but better.
3. As a teacher, I see it daily...

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My five year old has experienced this same dynamic beginning in pre-k with a specific child. I've gone to the admistrator of the school each year and requestd that she not be in the same class with my child and my wishes have been respected. I agree with the others, the school should take a more proactive role. I too am struggling with how to help my daughter cope. So sad to see this so rampant through out our society...

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Hi, be careful what her (your daughters) feelings are and what are your feelings. My 14 year old went through some things in the last 3 or 4 years. I took them much harder than she did. I found that she was very strong and she ended up saying, its ok I know who she (her friend) is. I on the other hand went to war with Moms who were my friends because of their daughters behavior. My daughter was so much more together then I was. This was 5th 6th grade...

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My daughter is 4, and even at this age, there are kids who are bossy and controlling. I've told my daughter that she does not have to hang out with people who don't treat her with respect and she has chosen not to play with those girls again (at least for the time being). The nice thing is that she has other friends to choose from...

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We homeschool partly because of this situation. The playground was always out of control and the "monitors" stood in a circle talking to each other and sipping their coffees and ignoring the playground behavior...

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Sadly this what your daughter is going through is typical. As is the schools lack of response. I have been through this myself; both as a child and with my own daughter. There are a million reasons why schools don't attend to these issues; lack of resources, disinterest and blow back from the parents of the offending girls. It sounds like Emma has alot of emotional and social support going through this from you and other friends. Continue to support her to stand up for herself...

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This is a TOUGH to hear,yet it is an EASY One! EMPOWER YOUR DAUGHTER!

We all have that special friend who is strong, a Sister,a Grandma, an Aunt. Go get them, and empower your daughter , of actionis not taken you are rasing a bully TARGET in the years to come.

Surprise your daughter! When you pick her up from school! Bring her a bouquet of Flowers and Bright balloons, walk proudly into school and say we are having a fun day!

It will marvel all the mean girls.....

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I feel so bad for u and emma, kids can be so mean and the parents to these kids arent any better sometimes everyone wants there kids to be the popular kids and the one everyone wants to be friends with but some kids are just taught not to be nice to everyone and to only play with kids who are just as snobby as they are, i have a son who is the same age and we are going threw this problem last year becasue he has to wear glasses so we moved him to a new school for this new school year coming up and he seems excited i know he cant run from his problems but i wanted he to have a fresh start and i in couraged him to play with the kids who no one wants to play with because they make the best freinds you will ever find i told him that when ur not wanting to be freinds with the popular kids they really wanna play with u then but dont forget who ur real friends are they dont care what kind of shoes u have on or what cartoons u like to watch ..iu hope this helps and good luck to ya'll this coming school year..

I empathize with you. My daughter, just finished second grade, went through something very similar this past yeart. The mean girls, the best friend that acted one way with her alone and completely different when around others, isolating her from group activities...it was like reading about my daughter Erin. What helped us get through the year was that she had very compassionate and understanding teachers that were willing to work with us to help my daughter and the mean girls get along...

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My daughter went through the same and she is in 1st Grade. I think the best solution is to bring it to the teacher's attention and give your child confidence to handle the situation and not feel bad. I talk to my daughter every day after school and ask her what happened. We asked the teacher to change her lunch table which helped a great deal. Other than that, I taught her to defend herself when she is teased and also to let it bounce off...

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The teacher needs to stop this! Cliques are nothing less than bullying! If the teacher will not stop this, I would go higher up.

Kandy

Good work on what you've done. Unfortunately, controlling the kids in class will never stop the problem. Spend the summer teaching Emma to speak up firmly the moment anyone says something mean to her. The sweet quiet kids are always victims. My daughter is 4 and sometimes is the "left out one" and when she tells me that kids don't let her play I tell her, "If someone says that to you, you should tell them they are not being nice and be strong. Yell if you have to...

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Since your daughter has friends outside of this classroom she is not an outcast by any means. Her bff is not a bff at all and you need to explain that to her and end that relationship until the other girl figures out what friendship means. As for the group activities, she should try to befriend the boys or leave it up to the teacher. Clearly the teacher is ignoring the situation. She should make groups and mix all the boys and girls up. Your daughter should do her best to ignore these girls...

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Hello this has happened to my daughter as well one of the things that I had to look at and realize is these are kids and kid are going to be mean this a cross road in the age group were all kids want to be accepted by ther peer's this is a learning lesson for your daughter and mine and the other kids .I had to tell my daughter that all kids are not going to treat her nice I had to even talk to some of the parent to let them how there child was acting some kids are raise to think that they are better than any of the kids and I have also seen were there was something going on in the other kids house to make the child act out in school. I have reseach I also teach sunday school class and I watch how some of the kids even at Church treat the other kids and I have corrected them It starts at home and especailly at that age they have to identify who they are and I really think for your child and mine that this is a lesson that all friends are not good friends she is learning what a true friend is suppose to be and act like you need to keep pointing out to her that a friend does not treat you like that and she will soon see what you are talking about I even had to tell my daughter when her friends and cousins start being funny with her walk away and fine something else to do she even wanted to transfer to differnt school but that is not going to fix the problem because you are going to encounter the same thing but with differnt kids there is always going to be some one that does not like you ARE the child is so nice because that is how the parent has taught the child to be that a kid is going to try to take advantage. Emma is just learning what a true friend is she will get tried of it and start to understand just pray that GOD will give her the wisdom to understand what is going on.My daughter understands now and I told her never to treat people the way that the other kids treat her.

This is certainly not new behavior from girls. This has been going on forever. This is the way girls bully. My daughter went through the same thing and I questioned what it was she was doing wrong. It is not Emma, it is these other girls using gossip, exclusion, looks, and isolation to bully her. Get the book, "Odd Girl Out" there is also a companion book for your daughter to read. It tries to explain why girls treat other girls this way and what can be done about it...

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