Kids' Friendships & Socializing
Parent Q&A
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Nine year old-Not making friends.
–Jan 10, 2024I have a 9 yr old boy, in the fourth grade, private school who has ADHD-inattentive features. This year has been very rough. Kids in his class exclude him from activities, he gets picked last for teams and does not have any friends. The few friends he had in past don't want to play with him. When I ask why he doesn't have friends he says he doesn't know why or brings up something that happened in the third grade. I've observed on the playground during yard duty that he eats alone and does not play with other kids. The exclusion and isolation seem to have gotten worse prior to Christmas break. When I dropped him off during recess (January 2024) he didn't want to get out of the car and play with the other kids. He dropped his bag off at the office, walked outside and put his head down and walked to the stadium stairs. This is so heartbreaking. I feel awful. I have some appointments lined up at Kaiser but not terribly hopeful.
I don't understand why he is being excluded. I asked one of the kids mom if he did something to make her son not like him. She said that once he got overly upset about something minor and it scared him. I spoke with his teacher and principal and they are going to observe. I've put him in sports but he seems not to like that either. He likes swimming and roller skating. Again, I feel awful any suggestions or guidance would help. Please no shameful or mean comments.
TIA,
C
Jan 10, 2024Introverted 4th grader
–Nov 17, 2021Our son is a great little boy who really seems to lack social skills, especially in groups and on the playground. He engages well 1:1 with peers or his sister but it’s awkward and painful to watch him stand by himself at a birthday party while the other kids are laughing and joking and chasing each other around. They don’t bully him they just ignore him. He’s not good at sports but he’s a pretty strong artist and does fairly well in school. He just seems to be missing something. It’s kind of hard to imagine he might have ASD but I guess it’s possible. We’re going to have the speech therapist observe him. I don’t know if he can learn the social dance that others do naturally. We try to remind him to say hi and give him ideas to talk about with friends. I’m not even sure he wants to learn! He seems pretty content just observing from the sidelines.This whole thing bothers me more than it seems to bother him. I actually like the company of introverts and I don’t want to pathologize his personality but I also fear him missing out on the joys of friends and fun. He’s going to be in middle school soon and that just seems so intimidating for a loner. I don’t think we’ll be able to arrange play dates in 7th grade. Anybody else have a kid like ours? What are your experiences?
Nov 17, 20213rd grader with very few friends
–Dec 12, 2020Seeking advice or words of wisdom in regards to my 3rd grader (8 year old). She has a strong personality- strong likes and dislikes and is very expressive about them (lots of big hugs and at other times stomping & frustration). She is an avid reader. She loves to be outdoors doing non structured activities - she can spend hours playing in the sand at the beach or collecting sticks, organizing them and making up creative stories. During recess she likes to play under a tree with dirt or mud while making up stories and games. Her writing and conversation skills are ok. When she wants to, she will ask lots of questions but isnt always keen on answering questions. Pre pandemic, I got minimal details about school.
My worry is that she doesn't have many friends. She had a little group in preschool and in kinder there was more of the - the whole class to my bday party thing. In second grade, she identified a few friends she enjoyed while at school. If I asked if she wanted to invite someone over for a playdate, the answer was usually no. Pre pandemic we basically never received any invites either. Occasionally I would try to set something up (and still do although more strained that ever). I see girls her age sit in front of the zoom for 30-45 minutes and have a conversation. She is in a reading level group with another kid who is highly conversational and my daughter says a few words when asked. How worried should I be? I do realize some of this is my issue (worried she will feel alone, sad she doesn't have many friends etc). She doesnt seem to mind in the slightest. She does have a younger sister 1.5 years younger and they play for hours together. Our 3rd is 4 so our house is active. When we go places with the family, she interacts with other kids and seems to be happy. She and her sister are really sick of zoom and so if I reach out to friends to have them meet via zoom, she is only half interested and I am feeling like I am forcing it on her. Would you wait until she is ready to make for friends or continue to push the issue or accept her needs actually being met with casual friendships and sisterhood? Prior to the pandemic, she didn't really want to sign up for activities and when she finally agreed to try hip-hop there was only one other little girl in the class (plus her sister). I grew up having a best friend over constantly from kinder to 6th so I am trying to understand how different needs can be in terms of needs for friends. Words of wisdom please. - Worried mama
Dec 12, 2020Private School that Supports Social Skills?
–Sep 8, 2020My 8-year-old son is in a large OUSD public elementary and it has become pretty clear that he needs a school with more support around social skills. He has always been an introvert and gravitates towards adults. In the 3 years he has been at his school he hasn't made any real friends. He struggles with a lot of anxiety and insecurity but also seems to have a hard time reading some social ques. Our current school does a good job of talking about being inclusive and accepting but I find that without caring capable adults on the playground to help guide kids towards these kinds of behaviors, inclusiveness isn't going to happen. We are hoping there is a private school in the area that does a good job of helping young kids with this kind of stuff. Does your private school have caring adults on the playground to help kids navigate tricky social issues? If so, please share your experience.
Thanks in advance!
Sep 8, 2020Kindergarten - Trouble Making Friends
–Dec 12, 2019Our 5 year-old has been having a difficult time making friends during their first year in kindergarten. We suspect a big part of the reason is that they speak baby talk to their peers and make obnoxious baby noises frequently in their interactions. We have tried to address this kindly and directly multiple times, but haven't had much success and are concerned this will have longer lasting negative repercussions the longer it goes on. Is this just a phase? Has anybody else gone through this? Any suggestions or similar experiences and solutions would be very much appreciated.
Dec 12, 20192nd grade daughter's aggressive friend
–Dec 9, 2019There is a classmate / neighborhood kid about the same age as my daughter (2nd grader). When they are together, this boy is "mean" to her. At least, I perceive it as mean, aggressive, and not appropriate. He shows up at our front door to play with her sometimes. I like the idea of having neighborhood kids play, and we don't have many kids within an easy walking distance. I turned around to tend to other stuff while they were playing outside. I heard commotion and saw my daughter running away from him who was trying to shoot her with a toy bow and arrow. We ran into him at a pool and he started shooting water at her. The boy was with a sitter who was not nearby at the time to supervise the child. At both times, I heard my daughter clearly and firmly tell him to stop. I think he thinks it's funny. When I heard the commotion, I ran over and told him sternly that it was not appropriate. I asked my daughter if this boy does similar things at school, and she said "sometimes he gets a little crazy". I am not a boy. I do not have boys. I do not have brothers. I have mild tempered kids who like to paint, sew, sing, cook, garden, decorate her fairy garden, and dance. So, I am a bit stumped on how to react to kids whose first reaction is "throw stuff around, shoot/throw stuff at other kids, decorations and flowers immediately become target practices." I hung pretty bows and ornaments on a tree on our front lawn, and I did not anticipate that it would become such an attractive target for this boy to jump and grab, thereby breaking some branches. I have not spoken to the parents but I'm not sure whether it's even worth bringing it up to the parents or if I do, how I should bring it up. This boy has 2 other brothers and when I have seen the siblings together, I can definitely see that they play rough and the 3 boys fight pretty intensely. I would love to hear from the perspective of parents of boys. I am kind of nervous about this boy coming over to play, because of his big energy.
Am I overreacting? Any advice?
Dec 9, 20198 yr that suddenly doesn't like to be around younger kids
–Sep 16, 2019My normally very sweet 8 year old has suddenly in the last few months, started to dislike playing with or being around younger kids. She says they are "annoying," which of course may be the case, but she has such a determined negativity. She wouldn't hurt anyone but does say mean things. Is this an age-related thing or is there something else going on?
She's also gotten some negative attitude towards friendly classmates, that she would normally be (or has been) accepting of.
Mom in Oakland
Sep 16, 2019My son AA tells me about his "mean friend" (BB) who threatens him with "I won't be your friend anymore if you don't...(usually it is only over a toy). But this friend reduces him to tears by telling him that AA's best friend doesn't like him anymore, and prefers to be with BB (which is also a lie in addition to being mean). They tease a mutual friend together and makes this friend cry (this is not what my son would ever do, w/o BB around). After my son accidentally hit him with a frisbee last week, he hit AA more than 9 times in the face. My son told teachers and friends that he fell down instead!
I don't think this is a healthy friendship and do not think BB is a kind friend. I've been telling my son not to play with BB at recess, and wonder if this is inappropriate for a grown-up to do. I worry that I am being a helicopter mom, that I'm intervening too much. And it is difficult for other kids and parents to hear that ""AA's mom told him not to play with BB"
But the alternative is to let my son continue to follow him around like a puppy when the friend is so unkind. We will start karate lessons and playgroups to learn how to navigate friendships. But what do I do now?
Nov 3, 2018I've been struggling the last few months seeing my daughter have ups and downs with her close friends at school. She had a best friend in preschool and they’re still friends but now go to different schools. She made a new best friend in Kindergarten but that friend left after second grade. Now there are a couple of girls my daughter is fairly close to in class, but sometimes I sense that she wants to be closer with one of them, but that girl seems to have drifted apart a bit from my daughter.
I think in general I just want my daughter to have a best friend, or a couple of really close friends, and lately I’ve been worrying that she’s lonely. She’s an only child. Sometimes I think I’m just overthinking it but at times it really causes me anxiety to think she doesn’t have a close friend at school. I know the girls in her class can be a bit sassy sometimes, and my daughter is pretty sensitive. I’ve made several play dates with some of the girls in her class and I’ll plan to continue that.
I know she’s doing OK but if anyone has any advice on how I can help her or support her, I’d truly appreciate it:)
Nov 1, 2018How do I help my shy 2nd grader make new friends?
–Jun 3, 2018Some kids are lucky to be naturally outgoing. I have a boy who is more shy and reserved, and has a more difficult time making friends in class. Once he is completely comfortable with them, he is outgoing, fun, and very entertaining with his goofy sense of humor.
Watching him from the outside, there are all these cliques of friends already formed for 2nd grade. He has his own group of friends, but the dynamics are not very healthy (3 boys, always 1 is excluded), so I am encouraging him to find another group.
How is this best/most efficiently achieved? Through playdates? We have done a bunch of those and are not excited to do a lot more because we do not have a lot in common with the other private school parents, and make mostly small talk. Or afterschool classes? Or should I sign him up for one of those social playgroups in SF that "teaches you how to platy"
TIA
Jun 3, 2018I am wondering whether I am worried about nothing. I have a 7yo son, "Adam" that became very good friends with another boy named "Leo" in kindergarten. Towards the end of the year, I became uncomfortable with their friendship they became too co-dependent--instead of playing with a group of boys as he previously did, my son now only played exclusively with Leo, just the 2 of them. We used to carpool with Leo, and when we couldn't, Leo had stomach aches and cried. When their playdates ended, the boys cried, even though they see each other at school every day.
I stopped the carpools and requested that the boys be separated in 1st grade. My son now has made new friends and is able to play with different groups of boys at recess. Leo is in the other class, and now plays exclusively with another boy, "Eddie", just the 2 of them, even though my son routinely invites them to play with the group. They now cry when their playdates end. When Eddie is sick and not at school, my son pulls away from his other friends to play with Leo "because he doesn't have anyone else." When Eddie does join in play with the other boys, Leo would ask him throughout recess, "Are you still my friend?"
Of course, Eddie's parents have requested that their son separated from Leo in 2nd grade. The teachers will put Adam and Leo will be back in the same class again next year because Leo needs more emotional support. How do I teach my son kindness, to play with and include everyone, but also not be sucked into such an intense friendship with Leo and be isolated from the rest of the class again? I had sleepless nights last year when we cut off carpools/playdates with Leo's family, because I worried that I would hurt Leo. But I also do not want my son to be the social emotional solution for Leo for the next 8 years. Please help me do the right thing for both kids.
I hope that Leo will grow out of this, but it might not be soon. He is the one that cries when it is too loud at lunch, when the boys are too boisterous in PE. When I comment to his parents that the boys need to branch out more, they even more playdates with Adam, because "they do not want to break up the friendship".
May 27, 2018Boy with overprotective mom
–Dec 7, 2017My son has a boy in his class with a very protective mom. Basically every time the boy has a conflict with another kid or gets hurt (even if just accidentally during playtime) she insists that her boy is a victim and the other kid is hurting her kid (the word bullying is thrown around a lot too!!!) and that the other kid needs to be separated from her son and not play with him. The teachers are going along with it. My son told me this week that this boy has nobody to play with during recess -- at this point the list of kids who are not allowed to play with him is over half of the class and includes most of the boys (I believe all except for 4 boys). My son was added to the list a few months ago because the other boy fell and skinned his knee during a game of chase and tag at recess when my son was chasing him. I remember the teacher telling me about it and said my kid is not punished but he cannot play with the other boy because of his mom's wishes. I really feel bad for that boy. My son is saying that he is not allowed to play with any of his prior friends and is constantly told to go play with the girls or some of the boys not on the list but he likes active play and the kids not on his no-play list usually don't engage in it. I know this is not my problem and my son has plenty of friends to play with, but is there something I can do except just making sure the teacher is aware of it -- though I cannot see how she can not see this is going on. I told my son that I know he feels bad for the boy and I do too but I don't want him to get in trouble and so until the teacher says otherwise he is not allowed to play with this kid since I don't want him to get punished if the boy gets hurt accidentally during play with him or if the teacher sees and decided to say something. Any advice? This situation is beyond ridiculous and I cannot believe the school let it get this bad.
Dec 7, 20178 yr old boy sad about not having friends
–Jan 19, 2017My son is an only child and is sensitive. He is very caring and funny but he has trouble making friends. And since he is sensitive, kids tend to tease him and his feelings get hurt pretty easily which probably makes the situation worse. He did have a best friend but they are growing apart. His friend is noticing girls and my son is still just interested in playing.....this is also causing him heartache as he feels his friend doesn't like him anymore.
He has told me that he feels useless and that no one likes him and that his life is hard and he doesn't want to be alive. I do not know what to tell him or how to help him.
What have others done to help their kids?
Advice is greatly appreciated---it just break my heart that he doesn't have a good friend and is so sad about this.
Jan 19, 2017First grade son having trouble at recess
–Oct 18, 2016My first grade son has been having challlenges at recess. He says all his friends just want to play ball sports (four square, wall ball and the like) and they are telling him he's not very good. And he is somewhat uncoordinated for this age. We are trying to help him develop some new strategies (find a new friend who wants to play the games you are interested in, etc) but he's resistant, and sad. Ideas?
Oct 18, 2016
I'm sorry, this sounds bad. I am a little concerned about the quality of the school environment if the teacher was not aware of this prior to your raising it. My main thought is to keep pursuing social activities outside of school, and look into a change of school as a fresh start for next year. He may be in such a small school that the pool of potential friends is very small, and one misstep follows you for life. In the meantime, be his friend - that is, you or his dad make a point of doing something fun, playing to his interests/strengths, every weekend so he keeps a spark of joy alive.
I'm so sorry your son is going through this. My son (also ADHD) started having this same experience in fourth grade and it got much worse in fifth. Nobody was bullying him—they all just ignored him and left him out. I think ADHD made it very difficult for him to read social cues which caused the other kids to find him off-putting and strange. My son never understood why he was being left out and it took him all the way until his junior year of high school before he started to make some friends. He's still not great at it but better enough that he has a group to hang out with now and has enough confidence and resiliency to keep working at social skills.
We got through the very difficult late-elementary and middle school years by not pushing him to eat with the other kids or play games with them at recess (because that just made him feel worse). He spent those years eating lunch in the library and spending recess in the classroom helping the teachers out with things. Not ideal of course, but better than sitting alone and miserable on a playground bench.
Hang in there. He will most likely figure things out a bit as he gets older.
Oh mama, I'm so sorry - I understand how sad this feels. And to think you are paying private school tuition on top of it all! Agree that it is surprising the school is not more observant/involved. If it were my kid, I'd change schools at the end of this school year. 4th/5th grade is no joke, kids are not 'little' any more and stuff that happens now starts to really shape them up to and through middle school. I also echo that finding a tribe for him will really help. If he likes swimming how about getting him on a swim team? Or if it's roller skating is there a group he can join? Having a separate place (other than school) where he feels happy and welcome is really key in a situation like this - scouting, volunteer groups, anything that is other than school where he can feel he fits will make a huge difference, but again, I'd look for a new school environment. Good luck to you!!
I'm so sorry to hear. It is so heartbreaking to see your child have trouble at school and with friendship. I strongly recommend that you consider switching schools. When you mentioned that he is picked last for sports, I immediately thought this isn't a school culture that is inclusive. Our child goes to a small progressive private school in Oakland, and PE and sports are cooperative rather than competitive. They don't do team member picking, and everyone goes out of their way to be inclusive. In fact, if kids try to exclude a kid from their activities, teachers would jump in and address that immediately. The school culture is very important for kids that need social support.
Teachers and administrators should be working hard to work with you and your child, if there's a social issue like this. Many kids change school in 4th and 5th grades, so don't worry about joining schools in the upper grades.
In terms of sports, if he likes swimming, how about a swim team? Swimming is incredibly calming and therapeutic. Does he like to sing, act, or arts? Singing is also very helpful for ADHD and anxiety. Pacific Boy Choir Academy has after school programs, and it's a very supportive environment. Our child does the after school choir program there and have made sweet friends.
Consider switching him to a public school. There will be more tolerance, less cliquishness, and more different kids he might fit in with. And I think the teachers and staff will be more aware of these dynamics. A public school will also have to accommodate his ADHD and may have more resources for this than a small private school. Also, swimming and roller skating are great activities, look for a team or group activity outside of school like swim team, synchronized swimming, water hockey, water polo... In terms of Kaiser, they may have a social skills group for his age.
I am a retired public elementary school teacher. We had school wide programs to help students develop social skills and resolve disagreements with peers. A child with a physical disability or a child who was socially isolated would be paired up with a "buddy" to support them at recess. In the classroom, small groups worked together in science projects and in other subject areas, so students interacted with each other developing social and cooperative work skills. You are right to be proactive about your son's situation, which is so damaging to his self-concept. In public schools, a parent may request in writing a Student Study Team meeting which includes the principal, learning resource specialists, classroom teacher and parent to discuss student problems, both academic and emotional. I hope your son's private school has a process like this in place. In public schools, the clock starts with the submission of the request, the meeting must occur within a certain time frame. Public school resource teachers also serve private school students.
This article may be helpful: https://www.verywellhealth.com/is-adhd-a-disability-adhd-accommodations…;
This sounds exactly like what I went through - just a couple of years later than he is. At this age crowd-mentality and cliquiness sets in. Boys won't play with someone who could harm their social status. In my case as well, I had some ADHD-inattentive features and I did get overly upset about minor things. I feel in hindsight that the issue was that I was a highly-sensitive-person. Toxic masculine traits that some of the other boys displayed affected me and that made me the target of bullying first and ostracisation later. On the occasions that I did try being toxic to "fit in" it didn't work and just marked me as a weirdo. I would recommend therapy. Being able to tell the difference between what might have been meant as a joke and what was genuinely hurtful is something I learnt in high school and also figuring a measured response to something that was genuinely hurtful will certainly help. I think the best way here is for your son to figure it out with his friends on his own without the parents getting overly involved. In my case my mom did get involved (at my request I might add) and it did not end well for me. It's important that your son realizes that his feelings are valid. He has every right to feel bad about something someone said to him. What he could work on might be better coping strategies when those feelings come up. Hang in there - it gets better as boys grow older, especially nowadays with so much information out there about bullying and toxicity.
My son with ADHD had a similarly hard time making friends in elementary school.
Some things we did:
-Joined Cub Scouts which was a great way for him to see the same kids doing a variety of activities several times/month until 5th grade.
- I made 1:1 play dates for him with the most accepting, tolerant and kind kid in his class. Unfortunately, this particular kid was understandably very popular so to get a toe in the door I schmoozed his Mom at every school-related event that I saw her in and before and after playdates so that she would have a harder time saying "no" if I called to ask her for a playdate. She has since become a dear friend. And that kid and my son, now in college, are STILL great friends
- Before one of these 1:1 playdates I would sit with my kid and do some role-playing about sharing, taking turns, and managing emotions. It seemed to help during the actual playdate.
- Once my ADHD kid started taking medication in 4th grade, the medications tamped down his hyperactivity which was off-putting to peers and his relationships with other kids got much better.
- AND I would second the prior poster in questioning what kind of oversight the Administration is providing at the school your son is in and considering transferring next year.
My daughter (now 18) has inattentive-type ADHD. After nearly flunking 1st grade, she went on stimulant medication at the beginning of 2nd grade. The meds were a godsend, not just academically but socially. As her doctor said, it's not just about school, but also life. She doesn't like the meds (nor do other kids we know), and doesn't take them on weekends or vacations, but she is profoundly grateful for them.
Reason: inattentive kids do seem weird because they are off in their own worlds and can't get back to the "real" one. My daughter says she'd get caught up studying a bit of dust on the floor or daydreaming ("watching movies in my head"), totally unaware of what was going on around her. I witnessed this at home. On the playground, if she was talking to another kid, she might stop talking abruptly because her attention got caught by an idea or an object, such that the other person simply disappeared for her. I can't imagine what a hell most sports would be for your son, spacing out after a few moments of no action, then of course never catching that ball and the rest of the team hating him for it.
(What my kid experiences is pretty well described here: https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/object-permanence-adhd.)
She got in trouble a lot with teachers for inattention and impulsive behaviors. This led her to avoid social contacts that might lead to trouble, such as talking in class. The meds allowed her to pay attention to her environment, including other people, and monitor her own behavior. My daughter just leaned over my shoulder to read this, and adds that the meds also help her be motivated for tasks like homework.
I'm writing this because your post doesn't mention any treatment. I know a lot of parents are reluctant to medicate their kids. A common worry is that prescribed medication may lead to a drug problem later. The evidence indicates, however, that failing to treat ADHD is more likely to lead to substance abuse, because the person with ADHD may seek relief through self-medication (eg., https://www.healthline.com/health/mental-health/adhd-and-addiction). We also have Kaiser, and didn't have any trouble getting once our daughter was diagnosed. If you're uncomfortable with stimulants, there are nonstimulant medications, and if you're prepared for what's involved, behavioral-modification treatment. The research indicates that stimulant medication is the most effective stand-alone treatment.
I agree with the replies suggesting that you change schools. Obviously the one you're in isn't helping much, and private schools have no obligation to do so, though some are better than others. Our daughter was in private school until 9th grade, and the school did OK regarding ADHD (specifically, she got accommodations and was never bullied). She says, based on her experiences at Berkeley High, that the Berkeley public schools would probably do as well or better. Maybe more important, changing schools would allow your son to escape the fixed opinions that seem to have formed at his current school.
I just want to chime in to ask if your school has a counselor for ADHD kids or a special teacher who can assist with resources. In contrast, our school reached out to me and provided assistance and it made a great difference. We had someone who would address the inattentiveness and ladder cues to turn in paperwork. Eventually, the timers and post-its and the whiteboard reminders at home worked. It is a process and it is hard to watch. We had a great struggle until his executive functioning started to kick in and then, it was not perfect but better. If you would like to talk, you can ask the moderator for my email. Hang in there.