How do I know if it’s bullying?
When we talk about bullying we are talking about
something that is both behaviour and impact. Behaviour that can make people
feel hurt, frightened, scared, left out or worried - and the impact of this
behaviour leaves them feeling less in control of themselves.
We know that bullying takes something away from people; that
is one of the things that makes it different from other behaviours. It takes
away people’s ability to feel in control of themselves and to take effective action. We call
this our agency. Bullying strips away a person’s
capacity for agency.
It’s important to remember this when we respond to
bullying behaviour. If we can accept
that it takes something away from someone, our focus has to be on helping them to
get it back; helping them get back that feeling of being in control and being
themselves again. That’s why we have to involve young people in what they want
to happen, what they would like to happen, and what they are worried about
happening.
And sometimes we need to take
a lead from them as to what pace we go at. If we can do that, we can help
restore that feeling of being in control.
We are teaching children very important life skills. We are teaching them to negotiate difficult
relationships and that’s a factor of life for everyone. It’s a skill we all need as adults, to learn
how to get on with people and to learn how to dislike someone in a respectful
manner. That’s how we approach bullying.
What advice should I give?
Hearing that your child is being bullied brings out an
understandably emotional response. It’s difficult for parents and carers to
hear. It’s difficult because you feel so
strongly about it and when you hear your child is being bullied, you are not
always at your best.
Sometimes the advice we give children and young people at
this time isn’t necessarily the best advice. Being told to hit someone back if
you are being bullied is actually a common response; children and young people
have told us this is something they hear. We know it exists as an option to use
but we know, by and large, it’s not necessarily the best or safest option to
take.
It doesn’t take into account people that can’t or won’t
hit back; people that have mobility problems or who are too
scared, or people who won’t like the thought of violence. So there always has to be an alternative to
it. We don’t go through life answering challenges and relationship difficulties
by resorting to violence, yet we tend to tell children if they are being
bullied they should hit back - whether they are being physically bullied or bullied
online, that’s the advice we tend to give.
There is never one, single, answer when it comes to
bullying, it’s about knowing how to think about it and how to approach it.
Sometimes you have to ask your child, ‘what do you want
to happen?’
‘tell me what you have done so far?’
‘what would you like me to do?’
‘what do you think would happen if, say, I was to go up to the school and talk
to them about it?’.
If they are worried that you would make it worse, you
might have to try something else because most children want bullying to stop
with the minimum of fuss.
‘What do you think would happen if I spoke to
someone’s mum?’ or
‘is there someone else you can talk to?’
It’s about exploring options; thinking about what you can
do and sometimes having to say, as a parent, ‘look if I’m worried and I don’t
think you’re safe, I’m going to step in’, and explain why you are doing it.
This process of exploring what you can both do role models a way of thinking and the aim is to agree a way forward - a plan you can agree to and agree to review if it's not working. You will have a positive impact on their anxiety levels as they can discuss things with you and they can see your desire to help rather than you being angry or upset. It is not about as a parent or carer having all the answers - it is about asking each other questions, talking and most importantly listening, to get closer to an answer together.
Listening isn't always easy - especially if we are emotional but the one thing children and young people have told me consistently over the years is that they want listened to when they are being bullied.
This process of exploring what you can both do role models a way of thinking and the aim is to agree a way forward - a plan you can agree to and agree to review if it's not working. You will have a positive impact on their anxiety levels as they can discuss things with you and they can see your desire to help rather than you being angry or upset. It is not about as a parent or carer having all the answers - it is about asking each other questions, talking and most importantly listening, to get closer to an answer together.
Listening isn't always easy - especially if we are emotional but the one thing children and young people have told me consistently over the years is that they want listened to when they are being bullied.
The temptation to run off and solve it is an
understandable one, but we should always take a moment, pause and think, ‘how
do I give my child back a sense of being in control?’ because it’s that sense of
being in control that has been taken from them, and that has to focus your
response. Sometimes your child might ask you not to do anything straight away - to give then the chance to go back into school and see how things are.
If your child has been accused of bullying or you suspect
your child is bullying, you have to address their behaviour and the impact that
it has had. Children who are bullying others need help to repair relationships;
they need help to understand that what they’ve done is wrong. Sometimes they
know the impact of what their behaviour is; that’s why they’re doing it, but
sometimes they need help to understand the effect their behaviour is having on
someone else.
It’s important when we deal with children who are bullying
that we don’t label them. We talk about
their behaviour and we talk about the impact that it has, we don’t label them
as bullies. There isn’t any one stereotypical ‘bully’. Bullying is behaviour that makes people feel
a certain way – and many of us will have acted in a certain way that made
someone feel hurt, frightened or left out. It’s much easier to change your
behaviour if I say, ‘when you did that to him, that was bullying’. I’m much
more likely to get a better response then if I say, ‘because you did that, you
are a bully’.
People won’t recognise that label, parents will object to
that label and you don’t change behaviour by labelling people. You change behaviour
by telling people what they did, why it was wrong, and what you expect instead.
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