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Jackson
05-03-2013, 05:24 PM
LOL!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-22383453

A head teacher of a leading primary school has said young children should not have best friends because it could leave others feeling ostracised and hurt. But are people programmed to have best friends?

Besties, BFFs - whatever you want to call them, best friends make the world go round for many people.

Plenty of children naturally seek out a special friend and the childhood pal is a constant motif in children's literature - Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn or The Wind in the Willows' Ratty and Mole.

So it may come as a surprise to many that parents of children at a private day school in south-west London have been told it's not good for their offspring to have best friends.

Instead they should be encouraged to have "lots of good friends" to avoid overly possessive relationships and upsetting fall-outs, head teacher Ben Thomas was quoted by the Daily Telegraph as saying.

Continue reading the main story
Forever friends?


In the BBC's Learning Zone, youngsters Bill and Owen explain how they share things, help each other at school - and make up after a row
BBC Breakfast hears from adults, a former primary head teacher and a psychologist on the merits - or otherwise - of best friends
Radio 4's The Listening Project hears from friends of 30 years Gaynor and Kirsteen about how they've supported each other through crises
And the Magazine wonders what is the optimum number of friends for modern life
It's not the first time schools have suggested a "no best friends" policy.

Last year, Gaynor Sbuttoni, who provides counselling for children in London, said it was increasingly common for teachers to encourage pupils to play in large groups instead of developing tight-knit bonds.

But do we need best friends?

Humans, and children in particular, naturally find themselves forming special friendships, according to relationships expert Judi James.

"Children have usually had extensive bonding with at least one parent, so when they first go to school, they are used to being part of a double act, so it's only natural that they want to seek out a best friend.

"It's probably a bit of fear and a survival instinct. It makes them feel more secure, it's easier to face the world when there are two of you and it validates your behaviour, and who you are," she says.

But James thinks having a best friend is just as much an adult instinct as a child's.

"The term 'best friend' is more important to children - and girls use it more than boys - but as we get older, we give special relationships different labels.

"When people get married, they refer to them as their other half, their wife, or their husband. But most couples say their best friend is their partner," she argues.

For philosopher Mark Vernon "friendship is an issue in a culture of democratisation".


Adult friendships can be complicated too - as depicted in Gavin and Stacey
"There is a tension as we are not designed to be democratic in that way - to love everyone equally. It's human nature to seek an intimate relationship," says Vernon, author of The Philosophy of Friendship.

He thinks there is "something tyrannical" about saying someone can't have a best friend, and there's nothing wrong with children having a best friend, as long as that friendship isn't based on excluding or rejecting others.

The idea some children will suffer if playground cliques are allowed to continue unchecked has vexed educationalists for some time.

It's not just an issue in the UK. In 2010, the New York Times reported there was trouble ahead for the classic best-friend bond, after a number of schools and summer camps had signalled their intent to discourage children from pairing up.

Critics say banning best friends to ensure that no-one is left out prevents young people from learning about the ups and downs of life.

"If children are stopped from getting these negative experiences, they will end up being emotionally stunted - they need to learn to cope with being snubbed and other normal emotional experiences," says Dennis Hayes, professor of education at the University of Derby.


Part of the problem is people are looking at their own experiences, like break-ups and divorces, and making the mistake of treating children's emotions as if they were adults, he argues.

And by putting the spotlight on the negative aspects of close friendships, such as the friendship breaking down, adults are simply exaggerating day-to-day experiences.

Hayes recognises it's important a teacher has a "chat with children in the corridor" if they are experiencing problems. But, beyond that, he thinks there shouldn't be too much intervention.

"The danger is if adults direct everything, children will be less able to form their own relationships in later life," he says.

James agrees there's nothing wrong with children having best friends.

"It's more a case of needing another word for 'best friend'- something that doesn't imply others are 'worse', and is more inclusive," she says.

In the end, she thinks it comes down to having an optimistic outlook.

"If we buy our child a pet, there's a likelihood it will die, but we want them to be able to form a bond with an animal. We get married knowing it could end in divorce.

"Yes, a child might fall out with their best friend, they might get jilted, their best friend might move away - but that's not a reason to keep relationships at arms length. Children have to learn to survive socially," she says.

The Lawspeaker
05-03-2013, 05:25 PM
Political correctness and cultural marxism gone mental.. again.

alfieb
05-03-2013, 05:25 PM
I hate postmodern leftist progressive thinking.

The Lawspeaker
05-03-2013, 05:27 PM
I hate postmodern leftist progressive thinking.
I am conservative and (when it comes to the economy) left-wing. I just can't believe how far the socialdemocrats of the 1950s would have been removed from these idiots. And you know the worst thing of it all: those postmodern "progressives" cost us so much tax money because of all the subsidies we need to cough up.

alfieb
05-03-2013, 05:31 PM
I grew up in a multicultural city.

My parents, and indeed the schoolteachers did everything they could to ensure that I didn't grow up antisocial and racist.

So, lo and behold, as little ones tend to do, I made friends. One of them was a black kid who was in my grade. We were supposed to play together, but then he told me that his dad told him that he couldn't be my friend because I was white.

That's totally acceptable, because it's only racism if the perpetrator is in the majority, and therefore has power.

This entire line of thinking, created by the progressives, may indeed be the worst thing humanity has ever devised.

Graus
05-03-2013, 05:32 PM
Teachers like that need to be fired. Children arent their personal lab rats.

alfieb
05-03-2013, 05:34 PM
Teachers like that need to be fired. Children arent their personal lab rats.
Oh, but to the postmodernist know-it-all left, they are.

There's a kid in Canada that is being raised genderless. The parents refuse to tell anyone what the kid is, because they don't believe in gender roles, and want to let him/her decide for itself when the time is right.

The Lawspeaker
05-03-2013, 05:37 PM
Teachers like that need to be fired. Children arent their personal lab rats.
They need to be fired and see their licenses to teach revoked. Blacklisted.

alfieb
05-03-2013, 05:40 PM
I don't know about the UK, but here that wouldn't be possible because of education labor unions being all-powerful. It's nearly impossible to get a teacher fired, unless they commit a felony like pedophilia.

Szegedist
05-03-2013, 05:40 PM
Best friends are not something you decide on, it just happens.

Jackson
05-03-2013, 05:42 PM
Basically amounts to the same as saying "Our highly impressionable future citizens should not be allowed free thought and decisions for their own benefit".

Aredhel
05-03-2013, 05:49 PM
What such a stupid teacher :picard2: So now they won't allow them to have best friends.

It's normal that you feel more attached to some friends than others.

alfieb
05-03-2013, 05:52 PM
What such a stupid teacher :picard2: So now they won't allow them to have best friends.

It's normal that you feel more attached to some friends than others.

But they want to teach total equality in schools.

Remove grades. No scores in sports. Everyone passes, so that nobody is embarrassed or feels bad about themselves.

Best friends are better than normal friends.

Aredhel
05-03-2013, 05:59 PM
But they want to teach total equality in schools.

Remove grades. No scores in sports. Everyone passes, so that nobody is embarrassed or feels bad about themselves.

Best friends are better than normal friends.

That's just plain dumb. Like if having best friends would become you in segregationist :picard1:

Dombra
05-03-2013, 06:06 PM
Every one may join the playing, little children. Theres no need to for the same people to hang out :rolleyes:

Arathor
05-03-2013, 06:18 PM
Unbelievable that this is even being debated in British politics.

Szegedist
05-03-2013, 06:18 PM
No children shouldnt have friends, friends are dangerous and bad. Lock them in in the basement and protect them from all outside harm instead.

Kazimiera
05-04-2013, 04:30 PM
It is natural to want to make friends. Having friends is important and part of the socialisation process which is essential in forming a rounded personality.

CrystalMaiden
05-04-2013, 04:37 PM
Crazy like this exists in Europe?

Thanks AngloJew...

Issy
05-04-2013, 04:50 PM
Absolutely ridiculous. Why are they trying to curb natural instincts when it comes to socialisation? Oh noes, we must all be equal in everything!!

They might as well just start cloning people to exact copies. No reason for people to socialise or reproduce any longer. Just have an army of people who work, eat and sleep.

Incel King
05-04-2013, 05:05 PM
What's wrong about having a friends? It's most precious treasure kid could have. There's hierarchy in sense that there's always someone you consider more special and share stronger bond than with other friends. Unfortunately, when I was a kid I often moved so hadn't opportunity to have a friends. In adulthood there's no friends anymore, everything's just being based on interest.