Detailed research, unlimited stories, and our personal history show us the long-term impact on the invasion of girls in junior high school. Regardless of how our schools demonstrate this aggression, the adverse effect on adolescent girls is very large and destructive. As a teacher, we work at the grassroots level, show the community's commonality with the same struggle, make young women always sociable, make them more vulnerable and emotional than they think they are different Here's how. They will not only save their lives, they will help them become successful global citizens.
Media centered on girls' aggression was responsible for following cults and led to a relationship attack as a major way of interaction between girls. In the beginning of 2000, this media exploded: "Average Girl" - Attack Declaration on the theme of the movie; Gossip Girl - Books and TV series, the whole premise is to spread girls' gossip on the upper east side. A cruel and sincere story movie depicting pressure from a group of girls between two girls; The Clique - a fictitious book series detailing "Cute Committee" not suitable for girls at secondary schools. All these stories do not seem to accept or admire the meaning of culture. They present related attacks as primitive, uncontrollable behavior
In general, girls are more likely to use relationship attacks than boys, especially between 5th grade and 8th grade. Therefore, girls doing related attacks are often called despicable girls or enemies. At the end of the attack, teenagers and youth may be teased, insulted, ignored, eliminated, and threatened at the end of the attack. Relationship attacks are common in junior high schools, but they are not limited to tweening. In fact, bullying bully and other bullys in other workplaces will also participate in related attacks.
In recent years, attention has been focused on what is mentioned in adolescent girls and psychologists "human relationship attack" or in the movie "girl". A group of these girls spreads rumors and lies, rejects other girls, and sometimes shows a complete physical attack. Their aim is usually to wear girls who have not begun physical development yet, are different from other people or not suitable for wearing. Rosalind Wiseman (author of "The Girl 's Girl"), the author of Queen Bees and Wanabe, describes a 9th grade girl who is concerned about her life. It all began when she began receiving anonymous threat messages from another school girl.