My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

Are little girls capable of being catty?

58 replies

Alvira · 11/09/2009 13:00

Mothers, is it possible for little girls to be so nasty that their behaviour translates into an adult woman's version of female competitiveness? The girls in my daughter's school are very competitive over how they look, who they play with and not letting other girls join in who 'don't fit in'. My daughter goes to a private school? Does this make a difference do you think? Are children of middle class families more competitive? I can't understand why i seem to be the only Mum who's telling her daughter to be nice and kind to everyone at school while the other children do as they please

OP posts:
Report
pagwatch · 11/09/2009 13:04

Alvira

Girls of any class, creed or race etc etc can be catty. Equally they are all capeable of being delightful.

Your daughter is presumeably the one telling you that all the others are horrid and she is universally lovely?

Of course most mothers tell their daughters to be kind. Why on earth do you think they wouldn't? But children can be mean.
It is not a class or school thing.
My DD is at a private school. Her friends are mostly lovely with a few capeable of being mean. My best friends daughter is at a state school. Most of her friends are lovely with a few capeable of being mean.

Report
Hassled · 11/09/2009 13:09

Girls can be absolutely bloody awful to each other. My DD used to come home in a right state because X had said Y to her, and I'd get suitably indignant until she'd let slip what she had said to X in the first place, which was usually just as bad.

It's not a class thing at all.

Report
Morloth · 11/09/2009 13:10

I think all humans like a social structure, and of course we all want to be at the top. Girls tend to use words to enforce the structure whereas boys tend to be more physical.

We are herd animals and herds only work with a structure, so you have your ringleaders, your "yes" men, your minions etc. The trick is finding your place in the herd.

Report
Hassled · 11/09/2009 13:14

And from a very young age you can spot that on the whole, at break time, the boys are running around like loons, presumably running off any rivalries or annoyance at other boys, whereas the girls are much less mobile - they stay playing in little clusters, in quite a small area, where squabbles are much more likely to start.

Report
Hulababy · 11/09/2009 13:21

IME of watching children int he classroom and in the playground, and of having a DD myself, all children are capable of being catty and unkind to one another, either indivdually or in groups.

However I have yet to come across parents who don't ask their children to play nicely, to be kind, to keep friends, etc.

Do you truely believe parents encourage their children to be mean?


Hang on - another "is it because it is private school?" thread Children are children. They do not care which school they go to. It makes no difference to how they behave!!! It makes no difference what "class" the child is either.

My 7y is at a private school. She is in a lovely class of 14 girls. They all get on beautifully and there are very little falling out. There s very little best friend type talk and they are all happy to play with one another, and have been from day 1. As a class they have really gelled. My own DD, although not perfect as none are, is fantastic when it comes to friendships and relationships, as is highlighted in every one of her school reports so far. And she is not alone in er class. Yes, they have the odd squabble but it is short lived and never truely meant.

Report
pagwatch · 11/09/2009 13:27

Hulababy

There are rather a lot of these at the moments arn't there
'my child has just started at private school and i keep hearing talk of ritual sacrifice at break times. Am I really expected to go in and take part because DH feels that as we are paying our fees we should be able to get somone else to slaughter the butler'

Or perhaps that just me

Report
thedolly · 11/09/2009 13:27

Alvira - the sooner they learn how to deal with the cattiness of others the better IMO because it isn't going to go away.

Don't just tell her to be nice - give her some strategies to cope with the 'silly' behaviour of others toward her.

YABU in thinking that you are the only mum who's telling her daughter to be nice.

Report
cory · 11/09/2009 13:27


I'd say it's unlikely that your dd has never said or done anything that another child could construe as catty

pray God that the other children's mums don't jump to conclusions about you

it's a combination of the natural competitiveness of human nature and the fact that at 7 children are too young to always be able to know how to keep this within decent bounds
Report
fanjoforthemammaries7850 · 11/09/2009 13:28

I can safely say that girls made my life a misery on and off throughout school by bullying me, so, yes they can be catty!

Report
abra1d · 11/09/2009 13:30

Girls can be appalling. Really catty. It seems to be the case at all kinds of school.

Report
Hulababy · 11/09/2009 13:31

Yes, agree Pagwatch. Lots of them at the moment. All a bit the same tact too: my child goes to private school, but I don't like the way the children/teacher/etc are. As if private schools should be exempt from these issue, or should act in a different way to state schools.

Report
LadyGlencoraPalliser · 11/09/2009 13:32

You don't say how old your DD is but I tend to find that around 9 or so they can go through a phase of being quite unkind to each other. It seems to be a group thing too - I have seen classes where there is a constant level of squabbling and unkind remarks going on, and others where it hardly happens.
I also agree with Hassled. My DD1 very often reported nasty things her friends said to her, but after a fair bit of probing I would discover that she had said equally horrible things back.
DD2 and her friends, strangely, are a very placid little bunch and don't go in for this at all. She and her BF have been inseperable since they were 3 (they are now almost 10) and have never had a cross word.

Report
abra1d · 11/09/2009 13:33

Yes, nine is the 'magic' age, I agree. Or about year four.

Report
thesecondcoming · 11/09/2009 13:38

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

FranSanDisco · 11/09/2009 13:42

My dd is year 4 and attends a state school. On and off through Reception I've had 'reports'. Apparently her class has a lot of strong personalities (teacher's term LOL). It really came to a head last term (summer term yr 3). Dd is more than capable of handling herself verbally but I agree with the poster(s) who suggests it is a structure thing. They are all vying for a 'place', hierarchy of the classroom/ playground. Dd and another girl are constantly in competition with each other and the other girl is really mean to her (of course dd is an angel ) and only ever gives her side. I can't ever see them getting along nicely as when I ask if she could try she shouts "never!!". {blush]

Report
hatwoman · 11/09/2009 13:42

my immediate reaction to the thread title is: do bears shit in the woods?

the op makes me smile a bit actually, as it assumes a direct link between what parents tell their kids to do and what they do do - in both directions - on the one hand some kids are being nasty therefore their parents are clearly not telling them to be nice; on the other hand I tell my kid to be nice therefore she is being nice. it doesn;t work like that. it's all a bit more complicated. all we can hope for, imo, is that as long as we keep plugging away with advising our dcs to "be nice" and telling them how to deal with kids who aren't we'll end up with adult children who are part of a decent circle of friends who treat each other with kindness and respect and who can handle the unpleasantness they will, still, come across.

Report
GrungeBlobPrimpants · 11/09/2009 13:50

The question sounds more like a filler feature for a sunday paper . imo.

Does private school make a difference? Are children of the middle classes more competetive? Er, no.

Report
sherby · 11/09/2009 13:54

Well we had a sleepover for DD and I found two of the girls shut in the lobby and the other girls lined up outside. Apparently they had to wait outside until the girls in the lobby had decided who could be their friend or not

They were 4

Report
LadyGlencoraPalliser · 11/09/2009 13:55

First post too. Hmm.

Report
thedolly · 11/09/2009 13:58

The fact that the OP begins 'Mothers..' is a bit is it not?

Report
LadyGlencoraPalliser · 11/09/2009 14:02

Yes, the "mothers" thing is odd. But perhaps the OP just didn't want any views from fathers, grandparents, teachers or childcare professionals.

Report
Alvira · 11/09/2009 14:04

Thanks to everyone who has posted messages so far. I appreciate it. The thread wasn't meant to be confined to the private school arena at all. I was posing the question because people generally tend to think that private school parents and children are more competitive, thereby resulting in behaviour which is 'not very nice'. A number of parents have told me this. I am interested in finding out if this is true? Please state school folk, give me your opinion too.

OP posts:
Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

pagwatch · 11/09/2009 14:05

perhaps she was being very rude to us.

Report
Bucharest · 11/09/2009 14:06

I thought the thread title was missing a negative. Surely a more unusual eventuality would be to find a little girl who isn't catty?

And I speak as mother to an almost 6 yr old dd.

Just look at MN. Little acorns and all that.

Report
LadyGlencoraPalliser · 11/09/2009 14:07

Alvira - are you a journalist?

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.