Bullying Prevention Skills and Techniques for
Children
Child bullying is a big problem in our schools today. The main
difference between child bullying today from the past is the nature of the
bullying and the violence that occurs in the aftermath. Cyberbullying is
becoming a popular and more destructive form of bullying than traditional
bullying. More children today are bringing guns to school to seek revenge on
others. Child bullying has been around and will probably remain for years to
come. Unfortunately, we do not have the power to rid the world of bullying. The
answer to the issue of child bullying rests within us, especially the victims
of bullying. Victims of bullying are never responsible for being bullied. On
the contrary, victims of child bullying have the power in themselves to think,
behave, and react in ways that limits or eradicates bullying. As a society, we
spend much of our energy identifying and punishing the bully that we fail to
spend adequate time empowering the victims of child bullying. We should spend
more of our energy on the things that we can control rather than the things
that we have limited or no control over. We need to teach children about the
power that they already possess. Let me elaborate on a few issues that parents
should teach their children regarding bullying prevention.
Let’s first talk about the characteristics of child bullying. Typically, bullies and their victims share the same characteristic – low self-esteem. It just depends on whether they internalize or externalize their feelings that will determine if they will become a bully or a victim of bullying. Typically, negative situations and events in the child’s life can trigger low self-esteem. Externalizing feelings can cause some children to become bullies as they attempt to control their environment to compensate for their lack of control in their family. For instance, if the parents of a child are divorcing and the child is very upset about the divorce, he/she might feel powerless in his/her ability to keep his/her parents together. As a result, the child might take out his/her rage on others for purposes of seeking control to compensate for his/her lack of control over their parents’ impending divorce.
Let’s first talk about the characteristics of child bullying. Typically, bullies and their victims share the same characteristic – low self-esteem. It just depends on whether they internalize or externalize their feelings that will determine if they will become a bully or a victim of bullying. Typically, negative situations and events in the child’s life can trigger low self-esteem. Externalizing feelings can cause some children to become bullies as they attempt to control their environment to compensate for their lack of control in their family. For instance, if the parents of a child are divorcing and the child is very upset about the divorce, he/she might feel powerless in his/her ability to keep his/her parents together. As a result, the child might take out his/her rage on others for purposes of seeking control to compensate for his/her lack of control over their parents’ impending divorce.
Given
the same scenario (parental divorce), some children internalize their feelings
by not talking or acting out how they feel. Instead, they become depressed and
withdrawn feeling like a failure. Often, they develop a negative image of
themselves and their physical appearance. They look at others and the world
around them with shaded lens. When a bully validates this child’s feelings
about him/herself, this child often reacts negatively to the validation because
he/she feels the bully is correct in their interpretation.
Often
times, children with high self-esteem do not respond negatively to bullies
because they already know that negative personal statements made by the bully
are untrue and therefore are unworthy of attention.
As
human beings, our behavior, thoughts, and feelings are never dictated or
controlled by others, situations, and events unless we allow this to occur.
Simply said, others, situations, and events can trigger a reaction based on
what we think. For example, if I do not want to go to work today and my car has
a flat tire, I might experience happiness because I do not want to go to work.
On the other hand given the same event (flat tire), I might want to go to work
today to take care of some unfinished business. Because the flat tire might
delay or eliminate my chances of getting to work, this situation might cause me
anger. How could the same event in both situations cause two different
feelings? It was not the event at all that triggered the feelings. It was what
I thought about the event that triggered my feelings. Therefore, manipulating the
way we think can alter how we feel. We have the power to take ownership and
control over our thoughts. We however have limited or no control over specific
events, situations, and the behavior of others. Sometimes, we attempt to
control events, situations, and others but become frustrated when our attempts
fail.
Now,
how does the paragraph above apply to the issue of bullying prevention? The
main goal of bullies is to get their victims to experience fear, anger, or
sadness. Once their victim demonstrates signs of these emotions via the words
he/she says, body language, or actions, the bully has complete and total
control over him/her. The bullying will continue until the victim no longer
verbally and/or physically displays fear, anger, or sadness in response to the
bullying. The bullying will end once the victim responds the opposite of what
the bully expects.
How
do we get children to react the opposite of what the bully expects? This is
where role-playing comes in handy. Parents should regularly sit down with their
children helping them learn to react the opposite of what bullies expect. Often
times, this task is much easier when the parent knows what hurtful words or
phrases bullies say that makes their children feel fearful, angry, or sad.
Using these hurtful words and/or phrases in role-plays will emotionally prepare
children when they are approached by bullies.
It
is also important to teach children that they have the power to change or
affect the agenda of bullies by the words they use. For instance, if a bully
calls a child ‘stupid’, the child could defuse the bullying by stating to the
bully, “That’s nice”, “How about that”, “Oh, well”, and so forth. The worst
thing that the child could do is respond by telling the bully that he/she is
stupid or make other negative statements. A negative response will only inflame
the situation encouraging further bullying.
In
addition, parents should teach and role-play with their children specific forms
of body language that differentiates a child with high self-esteem from a child
with low self-esteem. Body language communicates feelings more so than spoken
words. If a child yells at a bully stating that he/she is not bothered by the
bully’s behavior, the bully knows that the child is bothered because of the
yelling. Lack of eye contact, looking down, slouched posture, lack of hygiene,
and low tone of voice can be viewed as symptoms of low self-esteem.
Parents
need to teach their children that bullies rarely get angry at them. Bullies are
typically angry at themselves and/or events that occurred or are occurring in
their own life for which they have limited or no control. Bullies indirectly
take out their anger on the ones they could easily control.
Parents
should never teach their children to physically fight back when approached by a
bully. The problem with fighting back is that children can get themselves into
trouble for engaging in physically assaultive behavior. Think of it this way –
bullies rarely throw the first punch. They always entice their victim into throwing
the first punch. This way when they are asked who started the fight, the bully
could easily and truthfully state that their victim started it. In addition,
there are significant legal ramifications that can arise as a result of
physically assaultive behavior.
It
is important to remember that physical violence typically occurs after a
negative verbal interaction. Violence typically is provoked and rarely
unprovoked. Therefore to avoid violence, the conflict can and should be defused
during the verbal exchange. This is why the words victims say and their body
language are so significant and detrimental to the outcome of bullying. Recent
school shootings suggest that the shooters were bullied by their classmates.
The bullying subsequently provoked the school violence.
Parents
should be cautious when teaching their children to ignore bullies. The problem
with ignoring is that the bully knows that his/her behavior is irritating,
annoying, and controlling his/her victim. Therefore, the bullying will
continue.
Parents
should be cautious when teaching their children to report bullying to an adult
without first attempting to resolve the conflict on their own. Parents should
encourage their children to first attempt to resolve the bullying on their own
with the skills taught above. If their children are unsuccessful resolving
these issues on their own, they should be encouraged to report the bullying. If
their children automatically report the bullying without attempting to defuse
the situation on their own, they will be perceived and labeled as a tattle-tale
which will encourage the bullying to continue.
Parents
need to teach their children the correct definition of the word ‘tattling’.
Some children think that reporting child misbehavior to adults is considered
tattling. Parents need to teach their children that reporting on others just to
see them get into trouble is considered tattling. A child that reports to
his/her parents that his/her brother is picking his nose is considered
tattling. Children always need to report to an adult if they were physically,
sexually, or verbally harmed by others or if they witnessed others engaging in
destructive or illegal behaviors.
It
is very easy to feel sympathetic toward victims of child bullying. However, it
would be more helpful to the victim if we are more empathic to their needs by
empowering them to diffuse bullying on their own. As a result, their ability to
defuse the bullying would ultimately raise their level of self-esteem and
self-worth.
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