But friendships at this point in a child’s development can also be quite challenging. Below are tips to help you prepare your tween for the ups and downs of friendships in the middle school years. Knowing how friendships may change, come to an end or strengthen can help your tween through the friendship challenges they will eventually face.
Benefits of Healthy Friendships
It’s only natural for tweens to make their friends a priority and, at this point in their development, they may prefer the company of their friends over the company of their parents and other family members. This should not be a concern to you, but rather something to enjoy. Be sure you don’t make your child feel guilty for placing such importance on their friendships, it’s a normal part of the development and only means that your child is growing their circle of trust to include others outside of the family. Children need a strong network of friends at this age to help deal with life and to have fun while growing up. Many long-lasting friendships may not only survive middle school, but they may actually grow stronger as shared experiences and common interests are discovered. Even friends who attend different schools or are a grade apart in school may still have enough in common to enjoy one another’s company. Strong friendships at the age can have a positive impact on your tween’s life. The advantages can include:
Dealing with school problems (such as a hard teacher or a school bully) together Enjoying time together after school Getting another point of view when dealing with a problem Having someone stick up for you Having someone to talk to or confide in Keeping one another out of trouble Knowing you’re not going it all alone Sharing common interests
Challenges
As important as friendships are in middle school, that doesn’t mean they will always be easy. Many middle schoolers find that their friendships may change during the middle school years as friends drift apart or form other friendships. Middle school students may no longer see old friends as they pursue different interests or passions, or if students attend different schools they may no longer have the opportunity to connect with old friends. But challenges don’t end there. Even strong friendships can be put on trial during the middle school years. Friends may lose their tempers, disappoint one another, or hurt one another’s feelings. No friendship is perfect, but many can withstand occasional flare-ups and even learn from them. Encourage your tween to work through conflicts. Saying, “I’m sorry” can mean a lot at this age, and helps children understand that they are responsible for the way they treat others. Strong friendships may weaken from time to time, but if an effort is made to work through conflict, these friendships will likely survive.