What To Do If Your Child Is Teased or Bullied

by Michele Borba, Ed.D.

Adapted from: © Parents Do Make A Difference! How to Raise Kids with Solid Character, Strong Minds and Caring Hearts by Michele Borba, Ed.D. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1999. ISBN 0-7879-4605-2.

My son's only seven, but he's been coming home upset every day. He says a boy named Mark keeps teasing him. Now the rest of the kids won't play with him because they are afraid Mark will start picking on them, too. he's miserable and doesn't want to go to school. What can I do to help him?

Some of the toughest problems parents must deal with happen right on the school playground where teasing, bullying and mean-spirited kids abound. There seems to be an epidemic of mean-acting kids these days. In fact, the National Education Association estimates that 160,000 children skip school every day because they fear being attacked or intimidated by other students. While we can't prevent the pain insults can cause, we can lessen our kids' chances of becoming victims. In my new book, Parents Do Make A Difference: How to Raise Kids with Solid Character, Strong Minds, and Caring Hearts, I tell parents the best thing to do is teach our kids how to deal with their tormentors. Doing so will show them there are ways to resolve conflicts without losing face or resorting to violence and will boost their confidence. So the next time your child is upset from teasing, here are a few ideas I suggest you do:

  1. Listen and gather facts. The first step is often the hardest for parents: listen to your child's whole story without interrupting. Your goal is to try to figure out what happened, who was involved, where and when the teasing took place, and why your child was teased. Unfortunately, teasing is a part of growing up, but some kids seem to get more than their fair share of insults. If your child appears to be in no immediate danger, keep listening to find out how she reacts to the bullying. By knowing what reaction didn't stop the bully, you can offer your child a more effective option.

  2. Teach a bully-proofing strategy. What may work with one child may not with another, so it's best to discuss a range of options and then choose the one or two your child feels most comfortable with. Here are six of the most successful strategies to help kids defend themselves:
    • Assert yourself. Teach your child to face the bully by standing tall and using a strong voice. Your child should name the bullying behavior and tell the aggressor to stop: "That's teasing. Stop it." or "Stop making fun of me. It's mean."
    • Question the response. Ann Bishop, who teaches violence prevention curriculums, tells her students to respond to an insult with a nondefensive question: "Why would you say that?" or "Why would you want to tell me I am dumb (or fat) and hurt my feelings?"
    • Use "I want." Communication experts suggest teaching your child to address the bully beginning with "I want" and say firmly what he wants changed: "I want you to leave me along." or "I want you to stop teasing me."
    • Agree with the teaser. Consider helping your child create a statement agreeing with her teaser. Teaser: "You're dumb." Child: "Yeah, but I'm good at it." or Teaser: "Hey, four eyes." Child: "You're right, my eyesight is poor."
    • Ignore it. Bullies love it when their teasing upsets their victims, so help your child find a way to not let his tormentor get to him. A group of fifth graders told me ways they ignore their teasers: "Pretend they're invisible," "Walk away without looking at them," "Quickly look at something else and laugh," and "Look completely uninterested."
    • Make Fun of the Teasing. Fred Frankel, author of Good Friends Are Hard to Find suggests victims answer every tease with a reply, but not tease back. The teasing often stops, Frankel says, because the child lets the tormentor know he's not going to let the teasing get to him (even if it does). Suppose the teaser says, "You're stupid." The child says a rehearsed comeback such as: "Really?" Other comebacks could be: "So?," "You don't say," "And your point is?," or "Thanks for telling me."

  3. Rehearse the strategy with your child. Once you choose a technique, rehearse it together so your child is comfortable trying it. The trick is for your child to deliver it assuredly to the bully--and that takes practice. Explain that though he has the right to feel angry, it's not okay to let it get out of control. Besides, anger just fuels the bully. Try teaching your child the CALM approach to defueling the tormentor.

  4. C - Cool down. When you confront the bully, stay calm and always in control. Don't let him think he's getting to you. If you need to calm down, count to twenty slowly inside your head or say to yourself, "Chill out!" And most importantly: tell your child to always get help whenever there is a chance she might be injured.

  5. A - Assert yourself. Try the strategy with the bully just like you practiced.

  6. L - Look at the teaser straight in the eye. Appear confident, hold your head high and stand tall.

  7. M - Mean it! Use a firm, strong voice. Say what you feel, but don't be insulting, threaten or tease back.

Final Thoughts

Like it or not, most kids are bound to encounter children who are deliberately mean. By teaching kids effective ways to respond to verbal abuse, we can reduce their chances of being victims as well as helping them learn how to cope more successfully with future adversities. Of course, no child should ever have to deal with ongoing teasing, meanness and harassment. It's up to adults and kids alike to take an active stand against bullying and stress that cruelty is always unacceptable.

Common Mistakes Parents Make About Bullying

  1. Not taking children's bullying complaints seriously--your child could be hurt. If there's ever the possibility of injury do step in.

  2. Telling the child: "Just tell him to stop." Bullies rarely just go away; kids need to learn ways to deal with them to stop their abuse.

  3. Advising kids to hit back. Aggression amongst kids can escalate quickly over very minor issues, and too many kids at every grade level are carrying weapons.



© Parents Do Make A Difference! How to Raise Kids with Solid Character, Strong Minds and Caring Hearts by Michele Borba, Ed.D. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1999. ISBN 0-7879-4605-2. To order: Jossey-Bass, 800-956-7739 or www.parentingbookmark.com,or your local bookstores.

Visit Dr. Borba's website at: www.micheleborba.com,

Dr. Michele Borba is an internationally-recognized consultant in strengthening children's self-esteem, achievement, and motivation who frequently conducts trainings for foster parents. She is an inspirational and highly sought-after trainer and has presented conference keynotes and in-house training programs for more than 550,000 participants in 43 states, Canada, Europe, Asia, and the South Pacific. Michele is the author of over 24 books, including Parents Do Make A Difference and Esteem Builders used by over 1,500,000 students worldwide, and five audio and videocassette programs. She has been a frequent guest on nationally syndicated radio and television talk shows and her work has been featured in such publications as Chicken Soup for the Soul, Family Circle, Newsweek, Family Fun, First for Women, and Los Angeles Times. Michele has been a field instructor for the Bureau of Education and Research and has received numerous awards including the National Educator Award by the National Council of Self-Esteem.

 

 

© 1995/2013 FCAC
Unauthorized Reproduction Prohibited
patek replica watches. swiss replica watches can be described as the oldest in geneva, an independent family-run watchmaking enterprises, independent status so that it cheap replica watch