Strategies For Helping Your Child Deal with Bullying Collette Murphy National Educational...

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Strategies For Helping Your Child Deal with Bullying Collette Murphy National Educational Psychological Service St. Catherine’s National School November 2015

Transcript of Strategies For Helping Your Child Deal with Bullying Collette Murphy National Educational...

Page 1: Strategies For Helping Your Child Deal with Bullying Collette Murphy National Educational Psychological Service St. Catherine’s National School November.

Strategies For Helping Your Child Deal with

BullyingCollette Murphy

National Educational Psychological ServiceSt. Catherine’s National School

November 2015

Page 2: Strategies For Helping Your Child Deal with Bullying Collette Murphy National Educational Psychological Service St. Catherine’s National School November.

What’s all the Fuss?

• Part of growing up?• Only a bit of harmless fun?• Can help children learn to stick up for themselves?• Something children just have to put up with?• Something children have to learn to sort out for themselves?

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Reality

• A big fear for many children• Most children are bullied at some time during their school lives• No parent can be confident that his/ her child will never bully• No parent can be confident that his/ her child will never be bullied• School is where most bullying takes place• It happens in every school

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The Silent Nightmare

Eventhough it may happen in front of other children,- it tends to be suffered in silence- it thrives on fear and secrecy

Can lead to:-Feelings of loneliness, unhappiness, shame-Loss of confidence-Withdrawn behaviour- Illness… physical, psychological, mental health issues

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Nightmare….contd

- May try to deny/ turn their back on what they feel is responsible(e.g. their “difference”)

- May take out their anger or frustration on family membersIn school, - May be tense- May be easily-distracted- Behaviour may be affected- School progress may be affected- May not want to go to school- School is miserable

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What is Bullying?

• “unwanted negative behaviour…conducted by an individual or group against another person (or persons) and which is repeated over time” • “aggressive behaviour which is an abuse of power by an individual or group

of individuals against others…. Usually deliberate and repeated”• It can be:

- Verbal -Cyber- Social- Psychological- Material- Physical

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Who?

No such thing as the “Typical Bully” We can all bully at some time Sometimes can see:

- limited confidence- unhappiness- jealousy- being bullied him/ herself

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Why?

Will engage in bullying behaviour to achieve a range of things, including:-To make up for a lack of success-To gain attention-To look tough-To get rid of anger-To get some fun or excitement out of others’ fears-To make the group feel closer/ to keep friendship groups-To gain material things

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Who? (Victim)

Anyone can be bulliedMany children are bullied for no particular reason

More likely to be bullied if seen as:-Vulnerable-Different-Spend a lot of time alone

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Do you always know if your child is being bullied? Why Victims (or those observing) Don’t TellFearShameDon’t want to worry parentsDon’t want to be a “telltale”

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Do you always know if your child is being bullied?...ContdPossible Warning SignsSudden Big Changes in Behaviour:-Unwilling to go to school, frightened of walking to/ from, changed route-Begin doing poorly in work-Begin bullying siblings; become irritable/ aggressive; have temper outbursts-Changed eating patterns…eat more/ eat less-Changed sleeping patterns… sleep more/ sleep less, have nightmares-Become ill- Become withdrawn, drop his/ her interests

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What To Do?

Aim: Restore/Instill Confidence In Your Child’s Ability To Sort Things Out

Firstly,Be aware of your own emotions and responses….

Anger? Anxiety? Disappointment? Frustration? Sadness? Confusion? Helplessness?

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What to Do… contd

Unhelpful Responses:

Leave it to me…I know exactly what to do…We’ll sort it out in no time…I want to know everything…I don’t need to know the details…No need to get upset…That’s nothing…. When I was at school…

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What to Do…contd

• Stop, Stay Calm, Think Things Through• It’s important your child feels you are in control• Let your child know you believe her, you’re pleased she has told you, it’s

not her fault, she is not the problem, you’re sorry it has happened• Check how she is feeling… Anger? Shame? Fear?• Check is she believing the things said about her (if Verbal/Cyber Bullying)• Check if she is feeling that she’s the only one being bullied• Check if she’s concerned about her safety• Approach it as a problem to be solved

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What To Do… contnd

• Find out the Facts but go at the child’s pace; resist persistent questioning• Assess the seriousness of the bullying behaviour:

Which forms of bullying? By whom? How often? For how long?-How much was/ is your child hurt?-How much do you/ your child think the bullying child intended to hurt?

• Give your child the chance to express why she thinks it might be happening• Give your child the chance to suggest ways of dealing with it• If the problem persists, go to the school; nip it in the bud- don’t wait til

parents’ night; often teachers don’t know anything about the bullying; check how your child is in school• Keep a record of incidents- who, when, where, how…

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What To Do…. contnd

Afterwards….Help your child to:• Continue to express any feelings she has about what happened/ happens at school; if the bullying

was short-term, perhaps don’t keep bringing it up; if it was long-term, don’t not bring it up for fear of reminding her of the past.. Your child will be thinking about it for a long time

• Practise ways to defend/ stick up for herself…see below• Plan a (positive and realistic) response to the behaviour if it were to happen againEncourage friendships/ opportunities for making friendsEncourage a new hobby or skill to boost confidenceEncourage an after-school activity (one perhaps with a lot of structure/ support at first)Teach Playground Skills…. see belowBe aware of what your child is observing at home in terms of communication skills, dealing with conflict, expressing feelings, problem-solving skills, etc.Be a refuge: patience, support, unconditional love, time….

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Should My Child Hit Back?

• Able to/Want to?• Are you condoning aggression?• Will it get your child into trouble?• Will he/ she be able to fight all the friends of the child who is

bullying?• Are you avoiding dealing with it as a parent?

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What Children Can Do (i.e. Options)When Bullying Happens…Child might choose among these…

• React quickly, assertively and calmly with a loud command: Stop!, No!, Get lost! and walk away• Think up short punchy replies to the usual comments/ names you get• Try to look confident..keep head up, look in the eye…• Think: “I’m not the problem…it’s not my fault…. There’s nothing wrong with

me…”…identify negative self-talk… substitute positive self-talk• Take deep breaths• Don’t show you’re upset• Try not to react to what they do/ say….Ignore…. But don’t ignore how you feel• Stop…Think….Do

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Options…What Children Can Do….contnd• Accept their decision (if you have been excluded)- all kids get left out

sometimes• Tell them how you feel• “That’s not a very nice thing to say/ do”… but said in a controlled

assertive manner• Try to feel good about yourself…. spend time on interests/ skills• Find another friend• Think about why you might be being bullied…. Does this give you any

other ideas re. what you might do?

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Playground Skills

• Social Skills• Friendship Skills• Assertiveness• Self-Control

See attached List of Playground Skills