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Bullying: A Guide for Parents
Bullying has become a concern for many parents. Whether your child is classified as a victim, bully, or witness/bystander, bullying can lead to a number of physical, academic, and social-emotional difficulties. Many schools have developed programs to increase partnerships between teachers, parents, and students to reduce bullying behavior, and most states have even signed legislation that addresses bullying and student violence. Despite these efforts, however, some research says that bullying has actually increased in the last decade with as many as 3 out of 4 students having been bullied at some point during school hours. While schools need to continue to work against bullying behavior, it has become increasingly important for parents to become knowledgeable, involved, and engaged in helping their children put a stop to bullying.
What is Bullying?
Bullying is a pattern of repeated, deliberate, and largely unprovoked actions with the intent to harm another individual or group of individuals, and can be either direct or indirect. Direct bullying is overt, aggressive behavior including physical and verbal aggression, teasing or name calling, taunting, threatening, and hitting. Indirect bullying (often called relational aggression) consists of covert, harmful behaviors that may include ridiculing, spreading rumors, intentional exclusion and social isolation, and writing graffiti about another child. Cyber-bullying is a new form of bullying that has emerged from a growth in technology and use of the internet among children and youth. Cyber bullying includes sending mean or threatening electronic messages or images, posting sensitive and private information about someone on a website, or pretending to be someone else in order to make that person look bad or spread rumors. This kind of bullying can occur through many media outlets, such as e-mail, cell phones, web pages, chat rooms, social networking sites (e.g, Facebook or Myspace), and instant messaging. The Effects of Bullying
Bullying has negative consequences for all individuals involved. Victims can experience humiliation, anxiety, depression, insecurity, loneliness, absenteeism and drop-out, peer rejection, decreased academic performance, and a general negative attitude toward school. Bullies are harmed as well. Studies show that bullies experience higher levels of depression, anxiety, and criminal behavior as adults.
Bullying and ADHD
Children with ADHD are more likely to become involved in bullying incidents. Much has been learned in recent years about the numerous concerns that frequently co-occur with ADHD, including difficulties with peer relationships, anti-social and impulsive behavior, aggression, impaired self-concept, and even depression. These characteristics place children with ADHD at significantly increased risk for either bullying behavior or victimization, or both. Hyperactive and impulsive children, for example, may develop a pattern of bullying smaller, weaker children. Conversely, other children with ADHD who are shy, withdrawn, or less socially connected often become the victims of bullying.
Misconceptions about Bullying
There are several misconceptions about bullying:
Many believe bullying is mostly a male problem because they only view direct bullying as legitimate bullying behavior. While it is true that males do engage in direct bullying more often than females do, recent literature has actually shown that both males and females experience nearly equal rates of relational aggression, bullying, and victimization.
It is common to hear statements from adults such as, “I was bullied when I was growing up, and I turned out just fine. It helped toughen me up.” Just because bullying is common, or some adults have not been significantly affected by past experiences of bullying, does not mean that it is desirable or developmentally appropriate. Students who are bullies or victims are much more likely to experience a wide array of emotional, behavioral, and academic problems in school as well as higher levels of school drop-out and absenteeism.
It is true that bullying increases into middle school and then decreases through high school, probably due to the lessening impact of “peer pressure.” However, those who bully while in school are more likely to experience problems as adults. For example, up to 60% of boys characterized as bullies in grades 6 – 9 will have at least one criminal conviction by age 24, and 40% of those identified as bullies will have three or more arrests by age 30.
No research has supported this idea. In fact, many have found that bullies have high self-esteem.
Bullying does occur during unsupervised times, such as during transition in the hallway, lunch, recess, and at the bus stop. However, one of the highest rates of bullying occurs in classrooms.
This is generally not the case. Students tend to bully others in an attempt to obtain power over another due to such factors as age, size, support of the peer group, or higher social status. Students who are quiet, withdrawn, and passive tend to be targets for bullies because they convey an image that others can display power over them.
While all children have the right to defend themselves, no adult should condone the use of violence or retaliation to solve problems. Although a child may temporarily lose their status as a target by “fighting back”, they are put at risk to be physically hurt and learn a maladaptive way to resolve conflicts.
What Parents Can Do to Decrease Bullying Behavior
Many schools have had limited success in reducing bullying, and previously suggested interventions (ignore the bully or fight back) are usually ineffective. So the natural question to ask as a parent is, “What can I do to help?” Here are some guidelines to consider.
If your child is the victim of bullying
If your child is a bully
However, using aggressive means of punishment for bullying is, in a sense, fighting fire with fire. Screaming, corporal punishment, and long-term groundings may temporarily stop the behavior, but teaches your child that aggression is a viable way to problem solve. Instead, talk to your child about bullying, what your expectations are for their behavior, and positive or negative consequences for meeting or not meeting those expectations in the future.
How can parents work with the child’s school to control bullying?
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