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Parenting Solutions: Cliques (page 4)

By Michele Borba, Ed.D.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

What To Expect By Stages And Ages

Preschooler   Kids begin to pair off and start to exclude others. Five-year-olds can pick out the popular and unpopular peers. Cliques can form this early, but usually only because adults tolerate it, are cliquish themselves, or create situations in which kids are excluded.

School Age   When kids are around eight years of age, group distinctions begin forming; kids start associating with those who are similar and who share their interests. Cliques become more often of the same gender, and the larger the school, the greater the number and diversity of cliques.

Tween   Cliques hit their peak between sixth and eighth grades, then decline during high school. The urgency for kids to know where they stand in the group is a huge concern; tweens are strongly affected by clique rejection and exclusion. Although both genders form cliques, girls are more covert in how they treat others outside their group and tend to be more concerned about being liked than boys are. Boys establish themselves socially more by being athletic, tough, risk taking, and funny.

One Simple Solution

Help your child develop options for what to do when things get really tough with the clique and she is left out. The more strategies she has to handle those "bad, painful days," the better she can cope. Here are suggestions you can give her:

  • Change your schedule. Talk to the counselor and see if you can switch one class.
  • Find an adult to talk to, such as a counselor, librarian, teacher, or coach.
  • Find a safe place to go, such as the library, a friend's house, or the Boys and Girls Club.
  • Develop a new circle of friends. You might join a team, scouts, a school club, the gym, or a book club, or start a band. Look in your neighborhood and find one new kid.
  • Do something to make yourself feel better. Mentor a child after school, do a service project, stop off at your church and do a community project.
  • Start a new hobby. Ask your grandmother to teach you knitting. Take a computer class.
  • Read GirlWise: How to Be Confident, Capable, Cool, and in Control, by Julia Devillers; Cliques, Phonies and Other Baloney, by Trevor Romain; or Stick Up for Yourself: Every Kid's Guide to Personal Power and Positive Self-Esteem, by Gershen Kaufman.
One Simple Solution

Identify a Solution for "the Worst Place for Cliques"

School cafeterias during lunch are the place where kids are most likely to be excluded. Other "hot spots" are the playground, bus, assembly hall, and bathroom. Charlene Giannetti and Margaret Sagarese, authors of Cliques: 8 Steps to Help Your Child Survive the Social Jungle, suggest that one way to assess if this is happening is to have your child draw a map showing where everyone sits.42 Ask "Where do you sit?" "Does anybody sit next to you?" "Is there anybody sitting alone?" "Where do the other kids sit?" If your child doesn't have an ally during these times, the pain can be severe. So help her create a plan for the time and place she feels most alone. For instance, in the cafeteria: find another kid to join; make one new friend; join a club that meets during lunchtime. If the situation is severe, find a counselor's room to go to during that period or ask for a hall pass to go to the library

More Helpful Advice

Behind My Back: Girls Write About Bullies, Cliques, Popularity, and Jealousy, by Rachel Simmons

Cliques: 8 Steps to Help Your Child Survive the Social Jungle, by Charlene C. Giannetti and Margaret Sagarese

Girl Wars: 12 Strategies That Will End Female Bullying, by Cheryl Dellasega and Charisse Nixon

Odd Girl Out: The Hidden Culture of Aggression in Girls, by Rachel Simmons

Queen Bees and Wannabes: Helping Your Daughter Survive Cliques, Gossip, Boyfriends and Other Realities of Adolescence, by Rosalind Wiseman

Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls, by Mary Pipher

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