Help Your Student Deal with Cliques

The athletes, the cheerleaders, the theatre buffs and the yearbook club.

Every middle school and high school has its cliques.

“You have the cliques that hang out together because they share certain interests; these students often help foster each other’s development and are usually not a problem,” says Rochelle Harris, PhD, clinical psychologist with Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics. “Then you have the groups of kids who are actually excluding other kids and bullying; this is much more of a problem. The size of the school is a major determinant is the predominance of cliques. If you have a big school, there are more kids for a student to befriend; but if it’s a small school, there is a larger chance that a student can be excluded.”

Harris says cliques can affect each child differently.

“If your child has a great support system and a group of real good friends, then the clique they are excluded from may not be such a big deal,” Harris says. “That child is more interested in their tight group of friends to let it affect them.”

Harris offers these tips:

“When it’s genuine bullying, it’s not beneficial for the victim to try to stop it on her own,” Harris says. “The school needs to get involved, but the situation needs to be handled very carefully. If you crack down too hard, that child can be bullied even more.”

This helpful information provided by Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics.

Children's Mercy Hospital and Clinics

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