MINNEAPOLIS (Ivanhoe Broadcast News) -- About 90 percent of elementary
school students say they've been bullied, and six in every 10 say they have been
bullies themselves. It's an age-old problem, bullying has changed and so have
the ways of dealing with it.
Alison used to love school -- until a friend's dog bit her on the face, and her
classmates noticed.
"They called me scar face, dog face, and so on. Deep down inside, I felt really,
really bad," says Allison.
Chris McGowan's son was also bullied by his peers, but they did it over the
Internet -- creating a fake MySpace page portraying him as a pedophile.
"It just made my knees buckle. It was just that awful," says McGowan. "I think
outrage is the least of what I felt."
Psychologist David Walsh, Ph.D., from the National Institute on Media and the
Family, says cyber-bullying is becoming more popular.
"It's anonymous. I can literally bully another kid, and nobody knows I'm doing
it.
Here's what parents can do: Encourage your child to ignore the bully and block
communication. Help your child make friends with other kids. Bullies are less
likely to pick on groups. If the threats become physical, talk to a school
official or the bully's parents. As a last resort -- hire a lawyer.
"We don't want to bail our kids out of every social situation, but there's that
line when bullying is not a fair playing field," Dr. Walsh says.
McGowan's son changed schools and is no longer teased.
"It had a physical and emotional effect on him for months," she says.
But, if bullying isn't dealt with, that effect could last a lifetime.
Walsh says bullies are more likely to pick on kids who are loners, don't stand
up for themselves and tend to overreact. Many states are currently upgrading
their laws to deal with cyber-bullying. Vermont was the first to pass a law
treating cyber-bullying as a crime following the suicide of a 13-year-old.
For more information, please contact:
Darin Broton
National Institute on Media & the Family
(651) 221-1999