What Does Bullying Look Like?

What Does Bullying Look Like?

Medically Reviewed by Hansa D. Bhargava, MD on June 23, 2014
2 min read

There's a pecking order on the playground, and some children learn early on that one way to get to the top is to become the queen or king of mean. But where does typical kid-nastiness cross the line into bullying?

"Currently, there's a lot of confusion about what bullying is. The word is so overused that it's come to mean almost anything that hurts your feelings," explains Elizabeth Englander, PhD. She's a professor of psychology at Bridgewater State University.

True bullying involves more than a few isolated instances of mean behavior. It's a repeated pattern of taunting, teasing, and other aggressive actions. "It's a situation where [the bully is] setting out on a campaign to make the target's life miserable," Englander says.

Over the past few decades, the face of bullying has changed. Today, bullying is less about punching and hitting, and more about teasing and name-calling. The forum has also shifted, from school into cyberspace. A 2011 survey found that nearly 20% of U.S. high-school students had been bullied through social media, texts, and other electronic platforms.

What should you do if you suspect your child is being bullied? First, says Englander, don't freak out. You always want kids to feel like they can cope. "We've absorbed this value now that if you're a good parent, you leap up and get involved. But the truth is, everyone has to learn to deal with small meannesses."

Listen to your child without overreacting. "You can coach them on how to respond, but let them feel capable," Englander says. Try role-playing, offering your child different ways to respond to the bully -- these might include walking away, looking the person in the eye and saying, "Cut it out," or using humor to lighten the situation.

Don't step in further unless your child shows more moodiness, slipping grades, has trouble sleeping, or new problem behaviors like drinking or using drugs. But if you're concerned about physical bullying, get your school involved. All schools are required to address behavior that creates a hostile environment.

It's easy to be outraged if your child is being bullied -- but what if your child is the aggressor? Englander helps you spot the signs and offers this advice:

Look for bullying red flags. "One of the big tip-offs that we often see is in how these kids treat their siblings," she says. Siblings almost always bicker, but if one child is particularly nasty or aggressive to another, that attitude could be spilling over into school.

Teach good values. "The families that really push being a good person, where that's the most important value, are the ones whose kids are the least likely to turn around and mistreat their peers," Englander says.

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