A floral tribute from 16-year-old Karl
Peart’s teacher at his funeral in June read: “I hope you find the
peace you longed for. I tried to keep you safe, but my efforts were
in vain.”
Karl is one of three children to commit suicide in the last few
weeks because they were being bullied at school. He is believed to
have taken a mixture of painkillers and alcohol after being bullied
through primary school and regularly attacked at secondary
school.
The same month, Christopher O’Reilly, aged 15, was found hanged
by his Leeds United scarf in his bedroom by his mother. And a
couple of weeks later, 11-year-old Thomas Thompson took an overdose
of painkillers after being bullied for a number of years at school
for being “too clever”, his family said. He died before reaching
hospital.
Meanwhile, the parents of nine-year-old Jessica O’Connell
removed her from school after being told that a fellow pupil who
had bullied their daughter would only be suspended for a day
because the bullying was “not serious enough”.
Jessica chronicled the bullying in her diary. One entry reads
that a pupil “threatened to kill me if I didn’t let her hit me so I
had to let her hit me because I didn’t want to die”. Another entry
says: “I wish I was dead so I don’t have to suffer any more
pain.”
And just this week, Sarah Fisher revealed that she had lost her
voice for almost a year because she was so traumatised by being
bullied at school. The 16-year-old can still only speak in a
whisper, and then only for short periods of time. Sarah had been
repeatedly called names and pushed and shoved at school. The
bullying worsened after she lost her voice. She is now looking
forward to starting at a new college.
Schools have a legal duty to prevent all forms of bullying and
to have anti-bullying strategies in place. Earlier this year,
ministers announced a £470 million behaviour and attendance
programme in a bid to crack down on school bullying. Proposals
include funding and training for all secondary schools in
anti-bullying strategies and specialist consultants to help local

However, in all schools, at least 5-10 per cent of pupils will
experience long-term, persistent bullying, but in some schools this
figure will be higher. Bullying can take several forms,
including:
• name calling and teasing
• being pushed, hit or attacked
• having your bag or other possessions taken and thrown about or
stolen
• having rumours spread about you
• being ignored and left out
• being forced to hand over money
There are several factors that make bullying more likely:
• lacking close friends in school
• being shy
• an over protective family environment
• being from a different racial or ethnic group to the
majority
• being different in some respect, for example, stammering
• having special educational needs or a disability
• having expensive accessories such as mobile phone or computer
games
For six years, bullying has been the biggest single reason for
children calling ChildLine, with about 20,000 calls a year. The
recent report “Tackling Bullying” sponsored by ChildLine, funded by
the department for education and skills and conducted by the
Thomas Coram Research Unit found that over half
of primary and secondary school pupils thought bullying was a big
problem in their school.
Just over half of pupils in Year 5 said they had been bullied
during the term, compared with 28 per cent of pupils in Year 8.
Over 60 per cent of pupils thought their school was good at dealing
with bullying.
Name-calling was the most prevalent form of bullying. A minority
of pupils reported sexist, racist and homophobic abuse. Nasty
messages sent by text on mobile phones or through emails is
emerging as the latest form of bullying.
In 1999, the then DfEE said: “The emotional distress caused by
bullying in whatever form – be it racial, or as a result of a
child’s appearance, behaviour or special educational needs, or
related to sexual orientation – can prejudice school achievement,
lead to lateness or truancy, and in extreme cases, end with
suicide…Low report rates should not themselves be taken as proof
that bullying is not occurring.”

Latest bullying articles from Community
Care
http://feeds.reedbusiness.co.uk/d3ce7040-f094-45ef-8e51-d2d0cfebb2bf/Community%20Care/Bullying%20landing%20page.xml