How To Cope-Up With Bullying In Schools?

Digital 360
3 min readNov 25, 2021

What Is Bullying?

Bullying is unwanted, aggressive behavior among school-aged children that involves a real or perceived power imbalance. The behavior is repeated or has the potential to be repeated over time. Both kids who are bullied and who bully others may have serious, lasting problems. Bullying includes making threats, spreading rumors, attacking someone physically or verbally, and excluding someone from a group on purpose. Both bullies and victims can have serious, lasting problems.

Bullying is the use of strength or influence to harm or intimidate those who are vulnerable and weaker than oneself and acts as a form of initiation into a group as a method of mentoring. Students tend to be at risk of bullying during the early stages of transition from childhood to adolescence.

First, they move from their familiar environment, the home, into the new and unknown environment outside the house that is likely unfamiliar and potentially dangerous and overwhelming, and secondly, it is an identity crisis. Bullying can involve physical assault such as kicking and beating up, verbal taunts like name-calling and shaming, or emotional techniques such as intimidation.

As per survey done students of top schools in India, bullying in schools is becoming a norm in most places around the world. Millions of kids are affected by it every year. It has led to severe physical and mental ailments in several children.

How bullying affects a person

Bullying is a social problem that occurs in school days. Bullying can be a case of a single person or a group of people picking on one individual.

Bullying has caused a tremendous amount of hurt in many people’s lives. It breaks the confidence of some and destroys the spirit of others. Thus, victims learn to live with their humiliation and pain, while bullies learn that hurting someone else is totally acceptable if no one knows it. Every child is entitled to safe and yet fulfilling school life. Safeguard your child’s coping up with bullying today by ensuring that he or she knows how to stand up for what is right and never succumb to bullying ways.

Everybody has experienced bullying at one time or another, either as the victim or the aggressor. Bullying affects adolescents, not just at school but also in their communities, online and in their homes. Its negative effects are devastating to the victims. They show physical symptoms of anxiety, stress, humiliation, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), attempted suicide, and even death.

In modern life, bullying is a common phenomenon. It usually relates to abuses that may be committed by peers or subordinates against members of their social circle or work environment. At the same time, bullying is a life-threatening problem for many people.

How to tackle bullying

Prevention is better than cure. Bullying is not a new thing. In fact, it has been around for hundreds of years. The buildup of social networking phenomena where kids use smartphones and other gadgets to bully each other has increased the rate of bullying among students in schools. As a result, several students have dropped out due to the fear of being bullied.

Work with your child to develop their resilience and self-esteem. Help them understand that what they experience is not their fault. And if bullies don’t change, it may be time to re-evaluate the school involved. Bullying begins at home; lead by example. Teach your child how to build positive relationships with other children and lead by example: show them how you treat other kids by treating them the same way.

If the bullying is done in front of teachers, too, then that is a good enough reason for teachers to take action. If the bullies repeatedly bully somebody and hurt others in class or threaten them when they are alone then, this is a big enough reason for the authority to take action against it.

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