3 min read | Posted on October 9, 2017
October is National Bullying Prevention Awareness Month, which provides an opportunity for schools, communities, and states to talk about the best ways to prevent bullying. CDC’s Division of Violence Prevention recognizes efforts to improve the school environment and to prevent bullying nationwide. Learn more about your role in prevention and join our efforts to stop bullying.
What CDC Is Doing
CDC works to prevent bullying before it starts. We support evidence-based actions in communities to more effectively prevent bullying and youth violence. Research on preventing bullying is still developing, but promising evidence is available for school-wide programs. CDC is a federal leader in conducting surveillance and research activities to better understand and prevent bullying. Learn more about CDC’s activities to prevent bullying.
The percentage of public schools that reported student bullying occurred at least once a week was highest for middle schools (25 percent).
Middle schools reported the highest rate of bullying (25%) among public schools that reported bullying at least once a week.
Bullying at a Glance
Bullying is unwanted aggressive behavior by another youth or group of youth, who are not siblings or dating partners, which involves a real or perceived power imbalance. The behavior is repeated, or has the potential to be repeated, over time. Bullying includes actions such as making threats, spreading rumors, attacking someone physically or verbally, and excluding someone from a group on purpose. It can harm someone physically, emotionally, and academically. The damaging effects of bullying do not stop at the individual, and in fact, negatively impacts peers, families, schools, and even neighborhoods. Bullying can occur anywhere. It happens in-person and electronically (known as cyberbullying) as well as in and outside of schools.
Risk and Protective Factors
Numerous factors can increase the risk of a youth engaging in or experiencing bullying. The presence of these factors, however, does not always mean that a young person will become someone who bullies or one who is bullied by others.
Factors associated with a higher likelihood of engaging in bullying behavior include poor impulse control, harsh parenting by caregivers, and attitudes that accept violence. Factors associated with a higher likelihood of victimization include relationship difficulties, poor self-esteem, and being perceived by peers as different or quiet.
Few researchers have looked at the factors that protect a youth from bullying others or from being bullied by others. What we do know is that having positive problem solving skills, supportive families, and a positive school climate can help decrease bullying behaviors. The CDC fact sheet, Understanding Bullying, provides more information about bullying and its prevention.
Visit StopBullying.gov for additional resources and information.
Source: https://www.cdc.gov/features/prevent-bullying/index.html