Despite a dramatic increase in public awareness and
anti-bullying legislation nationwide, the prevalence of bullying is still one
of the most pressing issues facing our nation’s youth, according to a report by
researchers from Clemson University and Professional Data Analysts Inc., and
published by the Hazelden Foundation.
“Bullying continues to affect a great number of children in
all age groups, with the highest prevalence observed in third and fourth
grades, where roughly 22 percent of schoolchildren report that they are bullied
two or three times or more per month,” said Sue Limber,
co-author of the report and professor in the Institute on Family and Neighborhood
Life at Clemson.
Research shows that bullying affects individuals across
ethnicity, gender, grade and socioeconomic status, whether they live in urban,
suburban or rural communities. Bullying can have serious effects during the
school years and into adulthood.
Using data collected from the Olweus Bullying Questionnaire,
they analyzed a representative sample of more than 200,000 questionnaires
administered to students at schools that intended to, but had not yet
implemented, the Olweus
Bullying Prevention Program, an internationally respected
anti-bullying program.
The sample included 1,000 girls and 1,000 boys from each
grade between third and 12th — and the results were broken down by grade
level and gender.
“We found that 18 percent of all students surveyed were
involved in bullying others, were bullied by others or both, and that
cyberbullying was one of the least common forms of bullying experienced,”
Limber said.
A substantial proportion of bullied students did not confide
in anyone about being bullied, and boys were less likely to confide in others
than girls. Although more than 90 percent of girls and 80 percent of boys
said they felt sorry for students who are bullied, far fewer reached out to
help them.
“Many students also lacked confidence in the administrative
and teaching staff to address bullying and, by high school, less than one-third
of bullied students had reported bullying to adults at school,” she said.
“Although half of students in grades three to five believed that school
staff often tried to put a stop to it when a student was being bullied, this
percentage dropped to just 36 percent by high school.”
The researchers say that one of the best tools that schools
have for decreasing the problems associated with bullying behavior is to
implement evidence-based prevention programs.
“We hope that this report helps teachers, administrators,
parents, policymakers and concerned citizens raise national awareness about
bullying and improve school environments so every child can feel safe at
school,” said Limber.
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