segunda-feira, novembro 13, 2006

THE NATIONAL BULLYING SURVEY 2006 – RESULTS
The National Bullying Survey 2006 has revealed pupils in UK schools are suffering extreme misery at the hands of classroom bullies.
And teachers across the UK say they want more training to deal with the problem.
Bullying Online surveyed 8,574 children, parents, teachers and adults in the first six months of 2006 in the largest ever investigation into school bullying in the UK. The survey was widely publicised on national TV, radio and in newspapers as well as in young people’s magazines and on youth, charity, police and council websites.
69% of pupils who took the survey said that they had been bullied in the last 12 months and 50% of those said they had been physically hurt by a bully. 87% of parents who took the survey said that their child had been bullied and 77% reported that their child was bullied more than five times.
“We reply to thousands of emails a year so we knew the problem was a big one, but even so we were shocked by what we found out,” said director Liz Carnell. “This is a scandalous situation and it needs tough measures to sort it out.
“If assaults were happening in the workplace the attackers would be prosecuted but in many cases the bullies are getting off scot-free without any punishment at all,” she said
The charity believes there should be urgent research to find out why so many children are being bullied repeatedly, despite their parents making numerous complaints to schools.
“There have never been so many trendy methods of dealing with school bullying but the results of our survey are shocking and it’s time to find out which methods work and ditch the rest,” said Liz Carnell.
“Parents will be shocked to learn that bullying is big business but that none of the anti-bullying methods being used in schools have been evaluated in independent long term trials.

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