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No-blame approach to bullies comes under attack
Children are being driven to anorexia, self-harm and
truancy because schools are unwilling to punish bullies, children's
charities have warned. They have told the Government that the no-blame
policy used by an estimated third of schools is failing to stop violence
and may even be sending a message to bullies that their behaviour will
go unpunished. The Government has insisted that each school draw up an
anti-bullying strategy but concerns have been raised with the Home
Office that many schools are not punishing children who assault,
victimise or even molest their classmates
Kidscape, a charity specialising in child abuse, has
been in talks with the Home Office about the problem of the no-blame
approach after dozens of parents contacted them with concerns that
bullies were not being dealt with by teachers. Kidscape, which runs a
helpline for victims of bullying, said children in schools where chronic
bullying was not being tackled had been driven to anorexia and self
harm. They were even playing truant to escape persecution.
A spokeswoman for Kidscape said: “We have kids out on
the streets because they don't want to go to school because they are
afraid. Kids who are hugging teddies and blankets for security even
though they are teenagers. We have seen self harm. Children are
suffering.”
The call for a rethink of bullying strategies in
schools follows the murder of 14-year-old Luke Walmsley who was stabbed
by Alan Pennell.
“We are worried that chronic bullies are not learning
that there are consequences to what they do... and it doesn't give the
victim the opportunity to feel that justice has been done,” the
spokeswoman said. “The real danger is if schools don't deal with
bullying when it first starts, it escalates. The situation is not
resolved by the inactivity of the adults who are supposed to be keeping
the children safe.”
The Government's crime strategy, which has not been
published, is understood to highlight the need to target bullying in
schools to help combat violent crime. Teenage boys are common victims. A
Mori-Youth Justice board survey last month found that, for some young
people, schools are increasingly becoming an unsafe environment. But the
Department for Education, which is aware of concerns about the operation
of the no-blame strategy in some schools, said it was up to head
teachers how they implemented anti-bullying strategies.
“We say bullying should be condoned in any form. No
bullying is minor; all bullying is bad whether it is mental or
physical,” a spokesman said.
The no-blame strategy became popular with schools in
the 1990s and focused on the idea that punishing bullies did not help
them alter their behaviour. Its supporters say it is effective at
stopping bullying.
George Robinson, a former headteacher at a school for
disruptive children who co-devised the strategy, said the system of
no-blame was proved to work. “We don't want punitive responses to
bullying. We think a punitive response can put the victim further at
risk. The no-blame approach might not change the behaviour of the bully
but it should keep the victim safe,” he said. “Our approach works better
than any other approach that's around.”
The victims' stories
- One girl, who was groped every day by a boy at
school, became terrified of going to school and developed anorexia.
The boy received a prize from the school for stopping the
molestation for three days.
- A 14-year-old girl received constant threats from
other children. She “received no support or help” and was too afraid
to attend lunch, so went hungry every day.
- A 10-year-old boy was assaulted repeatedly and
returned home with severe bruising round his neck on one occasion.
His mother was told the bully was having problems at home and her
son was to blame for provoking him.
- A 12-year-old girl was taken out of school
permanently last week after receiving a death threat from another
pupil. She had been constantly threatened by other pupils, who said
they would beat her up after school . The school felt she was
overreacting and the bully got a prize for good behaviour.
- A girl of 15, whose younger brother suffered from
a severe illness, received text messages saying “I hope your brother
dies”. She faced threats to beat her up and once came home with
footprints on her stomach. Her parents felt teachers had failed to
confront the bullies and she has now been taken out of school by her
doctor because of psychological bullying.
Marie Woolf
4 August 2004
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=547700
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