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Bullying Solution Lies With Communities
The death of 12 year-old Alex Teka must be taken as a
sign of the seriousness of bullying and social relationship issues for
New Zealand children. What’s Up, a national helpline that answers 500
calls a day from children and young people all over New Zealand, has
received calls from children as young as seven years expressing the wish
to die because of the bullying they are suffering.
It is perhaps easy for adults to see bullying as a
relatively trivial thing that all kids have to go through as a normal
part of growing up – not good, but nothing too much to worry about. Alex
is a reminder that such complacency is ill-considered. While a large
proportion of children experience bullying and some particularly
resilient children seem not to be very bothered by it, our impression at
What’s Up is that most are significantly troubled and some feel
overwhelmed.
What’s Up statistics suggest that most bullying occurs
in late primary school or intermediate school. This has major
implications for parents and educators of children aged between 9 and 13
years. Bullying affects both girls and boys but makes up a significantly
larger proportion of the calls made by males than those made by females.
The children that call What’s Up regarding bullying
identify a variety of reasons for their mistreatment. These reasons
include ethnicity, resistance to pressure to behave in a certain way,
physical differences, high achievement, being new, sexual orientation,
socio-economic background, and religious beliefs. Individuals who have
low self-esteem or personal power can also be targeted.
The nature and extent of bullying can vary from direct
to indirect harassment, from minor irritants to assaults, and include
illegal acts (sexual harassment, racial abuse, deprivation of human
rights). It can include physical, verbal, written (text messages,
emails, hand-written notes) and gesture bullying, extortion and
exclusion. The most common form of bullying is verbal harassment.
Research on programmes to reduce bullying in schools
shows that the consistency and commitment of the school staff to
reducing bullying is one of the most important factors influencing
success. Any suggestion implicit in the behaviour of the adults that
bullying is tolerable seems to undermine the effectiveness of
anti-bullying initiatives. Perhaps it can be inferred from this that the
attitudes of adults outside of the school also have an influence. If
children observe bullying among the adults in their lives, are taught
that intimidation of others is the path to success, or get the message
that feeling hurt by bullies is a sign of personal weakness, a school’s
efforts to eliminate bullying are going to face a struggle.
While bullying is the second most common issue at
What’s Up, Peer Relationships – making, keeping and negotiating problems
with friends – is the first. Although parents and family are crucial
influences in children’s lives, children live in a social environment
that extends well beyond the home. Other children can have as big an
influence on children as the family does and are the most common source
of concern for children, as judged from the calls to What’s Up.
A child’s skills for dealing with other children –
‘social skills’ – are an important part of a child’s resilience to
bullying and are an important predictor of how well a child will be
doing later in life.
Our experience at What’s Up suggests that to prevent
repetitions of the devastating experiences of Alex, her friends and
family we need to address the attitudes towards general violence and
aggression in New Zealand communities and take steps to build the social
skills of our young children, not just their academic and sporting
skills. Children (and their caregivers) must never be allowed to feel
alone, inadequate or unsupported in the face of bullying and all adults
in a position to prevent bullying must work consistently towards this
end. Bullying is not just a ‘kid’s problem’, a ‘school problem’ or a
‘family problem’ but a shameful reflection on our communities’ abilities
to create safe and healthy environments for us all.
Grant Taylor, The Kids Help Foundation Trust
13 March 2006
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0603/S00101.htm
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