Bullying
The Many Faces of Bullying
Listening when kids talk about peer interactions helps parents detect bullying.
Updated August 30, 2024 Reviewed by Tyler Woods
Key points
- Kids can work some problems out, but young kids need parents' guidance on how to resolve social challenges.
- Actively listening when children talk about peer interactions helps parents detect bullying.
- Gordon Allport's contact hypothesis can help explain why being around an excluded peer can halt bullying.
- If parents learn that their child has bullied others, they benefit in the long term by correcting their child.
In an age of parents tending to stick up for their kids before really thinking about right and wrong, the parents who slow down and consider what's best for everyone will ultimately win by raising the best kids. Leslie Blanchard wrote an essay on this exact topic entitled: “I’m Raising a Bully.” Rather than candy-coating the situation of her daughter leaving a well-meaning peer out “just because,” this mother of five called her daughter out for bullying and then publicly admitted to it on social media. While she recognized her daughter and other classmates’ actions were not overtly cruel, she understood that avoiding a peer who was attempting to become a friend is a more covert form of bullying. This mother’s ability to empathize with another child rather than protect her own “at all costs” proved to be quite valuable. Instead of sympathizing with "how annoying" her daughter’s classmate probably was, she gave her daughter a task to get to know the other girl. It was not a suggestion, not a choice, but a requirement to come home the next day and “report three cool things she found out” about the other child.
Blanchard’s resolve to cut her daughter’s exclusion of a peer off at the pass was a brave and brilliant act of parenting. She taught her daughter and the other girl a very important lesson. She also warded off the chance of her daughter’s actions escalating over the years into more overt bullying by accepting, quietly consenting, or even encouraging her actions.
In addition to making a plan with her daughter to get to know the other child and checking in about how it went, this conscientious mother went a step further and risked her own precious pride to check in with the other girl’s mother. To admit that her daughter was not “perfect” (thereby, she was not a “perfect” parent) was brave. Blanchard rightly points out that other parents’ attempts to stay out of their children’s peer interactions and let them handle it on their own is wrong. Fourth graders do not have the life experience or the brain development to just “know” how to handle such complicated social interactions. They need guidance. They need support. They need parents to follow up with them and with each other. They need to understand how values of inclusion and non-prejudice play into their lives with clear, concrete examples from their own lives.
It is important for parents to see the forest for the trees. In this age of “helicopter parents” who hover, fixating on the details of their children’s lives, there can be many missed opportunities to teach children how to become good humans. Speaking frankly and collaboratively with children about how to solve problems and modeling examples of challenges that parents have to overcome themselves (without sharing too many details!) can help children start to think independently about how to solve problems. Children who are popular and well-liked, as Blanchard’s daughter is, have the somewhat unique opportunity to serve as an example of inclusion and open-mindedness. These children’s peers look up to them. They can model behavior that helps everyone act more kindly and inclusively and breaks down prejudice in young friend groups. Or they can lead the bully charge. Who do you want your child to become?