Parents... WWYD???

I probably would have told my child that was proud of him for standing up to a bully! Especially a 7 year old against a 14 year old.
I would also question the school as to why this situation was allowed to happen in the first place...
 
I don't think it was right for the little boy to push the girl BUT then again I see why he did it, I don't think walking away would have solved the problem and I really don't get how the child could reason with the girl. My impression is that the little boy didn't push the girl to be mean but to get her out of his face, the little brat fell on accident and really her tripping over another kid and then falling and hitting her nose from this little kid's push seems a bit..I don't know.Anyways, I don't think the boy meant any ill harm towards her. I would have just told him that it isn't right to be physical when frustrated and next time talk to an adult but thats it. I wouldn't of punished him.
 
Well, I probably won't be the most popular person on this thread, but... what is wrong with you people?


She deserved what she got
The girl deserved what she got.
This girl deserved a broken nose because she teased someone about a sports team?:confused3 I can't believe grown adults would think this.

With the way things are in the school world right now and the bullying, that schools just can't or won't, as far as I am concerned, take car of. I would actually be telling my kid that he did the right thing. I would explain that because the girl wouldn't leave him alone, he did the right thing.
Hitting first is not the right thing. Hitting a girl is not the right thing. Telling a teacher or parent would be the right thing. And schools today are much tougher on bullies than ever before. Many schools have a zero tolerance policy for bullying.

The fact that the bully was a female is irrelevant in these days of equality.
This may be because I am old fashioned, but I always tell my son to avoid physical conflict whenever possible, and girls especially are off limits. You see, I want my son to understand that if his wife or girlfriend were to get in his face and scream at him, it is not okay to hit her. Law enforcement and society do not look kindly on the "wife beater" mentality.
I can't believe you punished him!
grounding him for pushing a girl who was bullying him is ridiculous.
You may not agree with the way the OP handled the situation, but your shock, and calling her decision to ground him "ridiculous" is ridiculous. She made a decision that she felt was best for her child. She is probably trying to raise a civilized child.
I have told my kids to take the no prisoners approach and I will deal with the school if necessary.
With that kind of advice, I hope you won't be surprised when your kids end up in a juvenile detention center for "taking no prisoners."

I am so tired of the bullying nonsense. The bullies get away with it because the other kids are brainwashed at school that if you stick up for yourself then you are a bully and will get punished. It is ridiculous.
Huh? I don't think my kid is "brainwashed" because he has been told by the school, and by me, that he is to inform a teacher, adult or me if he is being bullied. In fact, I would consider that "sticking up for himself".

Speaking from experience walking away does not work, the only way to deal with a bully is to fight back. Telling your parents and the teachers is the way to make the bully attack more, not only that others will join in because you are a snitch.
So completely wrong in every possible way. We do not live in a vigilante society where we attack others. We have laws(code of conduct - for schools) that if followed, keep us relatively safe. A bully does not "attack more" if their behavior is relayed to a responsible adult. In fact, the opposite generally occurs. And others do not join in with the bully and become bullies themselves because of a student doing the responsible thing. For me, the above comment was the most bizarre and uninformed comment of this entire thread.




To the OP - the way you handled this situation is commendable. Your children are lucky to have you as a mother. There is nothing wimpy about teaching our children how to deal with bullying behavior in a civilized manner. Your children will be the better because of your excellent parenting.

As to the bully - I used to work in a school setting. I also have a child who has been on the receiving end of a few isolated bullying incidents. In my experience, I have found almost always that bullies are scared (and sometimes abused or neglected) kids. There is a reason they behave the way they do. It is because they have extremely low self esteem. I know many on this thread will find me wimpy or "living in la-la land" for saying this, but often times showing the bully kindness or listening to them goes a very long way in curbing their behavior. I speak from personal experience.
 
Well, I probably won't be the most popular person on this thread, but... what is wrong with you people?




This girl deserved a broken nose because she teased someone about a sports team?:confused3 I can't believe grown adults would think this.


Hitting first is not the right thing. Hitting a girl is not the right thing. Telling a teacher or parent would be the right thing. And schools today are much tougher on bullies than ever before. Many schools have a zero tolerance policy for bullying.


This may be because I am old fashioned, but I always tell my son to avoid physical conflict whenever possible, and girls especially are off limits. You see, I want my son to understand that if his wife or girlfriend were to get in his face and scream at him, it is not okay to hit her. Law enforcement and society do not look kindly on the "wife beater" mentality.


You may not agree with the way the OP handled the situation, but your shock, and calling her decision to ground him "ridiculous" is ridiculous. She made a decision that she felt was best for her child. She is probably trying to raise a civilized child.

With that kind of advice, I hope you won't be surprised when your kids end up in a juvenile detention center for "taking no prisoners."


Huh? I don't think my kid is "brainwashed" because he has been told by the school, and by me, that he is to inform a teacher, adult or me if he is being bullied. In fact, I would consider that "sticking up for himself".


So completely wrong in every possible way. We do not live in a vigilante society where we attack others. We have laws(code of conduct - for schools) that if followed, keep us relatively safe. A bully does not "attack more" if their behavior is relayed to a responsible adult. In fact, the opposite generally occurs. And others do not join in with the bully and become bullies themselves because of a student doing the responsible thing. For me, the above comment was the most bizarre and uninformed comment of this entire thread.




To the OP - the way you handled this situation is commendable. Your children are lucky to have you as a mother. There is nothing wimpy about teaching our children how to deal with bullying behavior in a civilized manner. Your children will be the better because of your excellent parenting.

As to the bully - I used to work in a school setting. I also have a child who has been on the receiving end of a few isolated bullying incidents. In my experience, I have found almost always that bullies are scared (and sometimes abused or neglected) kids. There is a reason they behave the way they do. It is because they have extremely low self esteem. I know many on this thread will find me wimpy or "living in la-la land" for saying this, but often times showing the bully kindness or listening to them goes a very long way in curbing their behavior. I speak from personal experience.

No, she deserved what she got b/c she was a 14 year old picking on a 7 year old! She's a bully. Bullies deserve what they get. You're never going to change my mind on that.
 

This may be because I am old fashioned, but I always tell my son to avoid physical conflict whenever possible, and girls especially are off limits. You see, I want my son to understand that if his wife or girlfriend were to get in his face and scream at him, it is not okay to hit her. Law enforcement and society do not look kindly on the "wife beater" mentality.

You are comparing apples and watermelons here. In the situation involving the OP's son, we are talking about a girl that is 2x his age and most likely a head taller. If you were talking about a girl the same size/age as him, your argument has merit, but the situation involved 2 different maturity/size levels.

As for the wife/gf example you created, you are right. No amount of screaming and yelling justifies violence. However, if she decides to throw the first punch, she'd better make it count, as she won't get a 2nd chance. That's not a cavalier attitude, but rather acknowledging the fact that the male is most likely going to jail, due to the inequality of the justice system in that particular situation.
 
You are comparing apples and watermelons here. In the situation involving the OP's son, we are talking about a girl that is 2x his age and most likely a head taller. If you were talking about a girl the same size/age as him, your argument has merit, but the situation involved 2 different maturity/size levels.

As for the wife/gf example you created, you are right. No amount of screaming and yelling doesn't justify violence. However, if she decides to throw the first punch, she'd better make it count, as she won't get a 2nd chance. That's not a cavalier attitude, but rather acknowledging the fact that the male is most likely going to jail, due to the inequality of the justice system in that particular situation.

Amen. Two totally different scenarios. I've always told my husband that I will never hit him, b/c that gives him the RIGHT to hit me back. If he EVER hit me without that happening, he'd be gone...I'd help the cops put the cuffs on him.

You simply can't compare the OP's situation to domestic abuse. It's not even close!
 
I wouldn't punish the son. this bully deserved what happened. KARMA! She should have backed away. My question is why didn't the adults intervene sooner? Either way your son was right in this situation and if kids stood up for themselves like he did more often the suicide rate might go back down. Too often we are concerned about violence. I'm sorry but if someone is in my face and I've asked more than 3 times for them to remove themselves- they are getting punched.
 
I would not have punished them if this was my child. We try to teach our kids the best things...how to act, right from wrong etc. However; as a parent, I would be glad that my child stood up for themselves. She was told multiple times to get away, she chose not to and ended up with a hurt nose. THat is on her.....she should have not tried to be a tough guy and pick on someone half her size. I say, good for your kid for asking them to leave her alone and after a while, letting the bully know she means business!

I tell my kids that they are never to hit someone. I also tell them, if someone is hitting you, defend yourself (they are not to ever hit first). I know it is not a popular opinion however; at any age, I would not allow someone to hit me and get away with it.
 
Speaking from experience walking away does not work, the only way to deal with a bully is to fight back. Telling your parents and the teachers is the way to make the bully attack more, not only that others will join in because you are a snitch.

I agree, if this was an ongoing problem. It seems like this was a one time incident with the OP's ds and this girl, she was teasing him (again, not nice), and he lost control. As for her "being all in his face," I've know my kids to make it sound worse, especially if they are in trouble. I think some people on this thread are bring in some baggage that don't relate to this particular situation. Kid tease - not all kids who tease all bullies. I do think it's strange that a 14 year old would tease a 7 year old non-relative, but I don't think this is a bullying situation.
 
Defending yourself is not the same thing as causing violence or even being particularly agressive. And a 7 year old hitting a girl is VERY far removed from a grown or almost grown man hitting a female.

So, I would take the "girl" aspect out of it in the first place. And if my 7 year old pushed a 14 year old who was "in his face", I would say "good enough, maybe she will stay out of your face from now on". Now the broken nose makes it a little worse but that was not his intentions, his intentions were to simply remove her from being in his face.

The girl is a bully and should be dealt with.

I am all for using our brains and our words. And I taught the "use your words" lessons to all three of my kids, as well as hundreds of preschoolers over the years. And I still know that there re times that walking away and using your words just are not going to cut it. If your child is never allowed to defend his/herself, you are setting them up to be a victim throughout their school years.
 
Agreed. It sounds like you handled it very well. While I think it's perfectly understandable why your son did what he did, it represented a great moment for you to teach him about options he has for dealing with this kind of situation in future. It also allows him to understand the unintented consequences that can so quickly occur when you escalate confrontation to physical conflict.

And, I know this other child was 14 and much larger and she clearly has issues. But, I'm a bit surprised at how seemingly pleased some adults on this thread are that another child ended up with a broken nose out of this incident. Last I checked, 14 is still a child and if she engages in this type of behavior frequently, she likely has some challenges of her own that she is facing.
14 years old is old enough to know better, her badgering and bulling has led to her having a broken nose and that is exactly what the brat deserved.
 
Well, I probably won't be the most popular person on this thread, but... what is wrong with you people?




This girl deserved a broken nose because she teased someone about a sports team?:confused3 I can't believe grown adults would think this.


Hitting first is not the right thing. Hitting a girl is not the right thing. Telling a teacher or parent would be the right thing. And schools today are much tougher on bullies than ever before. Many schools have a zero tolerance policy for bullying.


This may be because I am old fashioned, but I always tell my son to avoid physical conflict whenever possible, and girls especially are off limits. You see, I want my son to understand that if his wife or girlfriend were to get in his face and scream at him, it is not okay to hit her. Law enforcement and society do not look kindly on the "wife beater" mentality.


You may not agree with the way the OP handled the situation, but your shock, and calling her decision to ground him "ridiculous" is ridiculous. She made a decision that she felt was best for her child. She is probably trying to raise a civilized child.

With that kind of advice, I hope you won't be surprised when your kids end up in a juvenile detention center for "taking no prisoners."


Huh? I don't think my kid is "brainwashed" because he has been told by the school, and by me, that he is to inform a teacher, adult or me if he is being bullied. In fact, I would consider that "sticking up for himself".


So completely wrong in every possible way. We do not live in a vigilante society where we attack others. We have laws(code of conduct - for schools) that if followed, keep us relatively safe. A bully does not "attack more" if their behavior is relayed to a responsible adult. In fact, the opposite generally occurs. And others do not join in with the bully and become bullies themselves because of a student doing the responsible thing. For me, the above comment was the most bizarre and uninformed comment of this entire thread.




To the OP - the way you handled this situation is commendable. Your children are lucky to have you as a mother. There is nothing wimpy about teaching our children how to deal with bullying behavior in a civilized manner. Your children will be the better because of your excellent parenting.

As to the bully - I used to work in a school setting. I also have a child who has been on the receiving end of a few isolated bullying incidents. In my experience, I have found almost always that bullies are scared (and sometimes abused or neglected) kids. There is a reason they behave the way they do. It is because they have extremely low self esteem. I know many on this thread will find me wimpy or "living in la-la land" for saying this, but often times showing the bully kindness or listening to them goes a very long way in curbing their behavior. I speak from personal experience.

If schools are being so tough on bullies why are we still getting CHILDREN committing suicide over bullying. Also speaking from experience the only way to deal with a bully is to thump back. Showing kindess is seen as weakness telling parents and teachers gets other kids joining in on the bullying, in fact telling the teachers and my parents complaining to the head teacher got him in on the bullying as well so I ended up with several teachers and the head teacher plus the original bullies. I am fed up with the excuses made for bullying if you where on the street and someone hit you its assault if its in school well the "bully" has low self image to put up with it.
 
Well, I probably won't be the most popular person on this thread, but... what is wrong with you people?




This girl deserved a broken nose because she teased someone about a sports team?:confused3 I can't believe grown adults would think this.

She deserved what she got because she was being a bully. What she was saying doesn't matter. He did not intend for her to end up with a broken nose.


Hitting first is not the right thing. Hitting a girl is not the right thing. Telling a teacher or parent would be the right thing. And schools today are much tougher on bullies than ever before. Many schools have a zero tolerance policy for bullying.

Zero tolerance does NOT keep it from happening. He is 7 years old, she is 14 and probably twice his size. Being a girl has nothing to do with it.


This may be because I am old fashioned, but I always tell my son to avoid physical conflict whenever possible, and girls especially are off limits. You see, I want my son to understand that if his wife or girlfriend were to get in his face and scream at him, it is not okay to hit her. Law enforcement and society do not look kindly on the "wife beater" mentality.

Oh, good grief. He is 7. I can assure you that defending yourself from a female bully at 7 is not going to give you a "wife beater" mentality. That is stretching things a bit much. DS had an altercation with a girl at 7 or 8. He would NEVER dream of hitting his wife. He is a very attentive, loving husband who puts dil on quite the pedastle.


You may not agree with the way the OP handled the situation, but your shock, and calling her decision to ground him "ridiculous" is ridiculous. She made a decision that she felt was best for her child. She is probably trying to raise a civilized child.

With that kind of advice, I hope you won't be surprised when your kids end up in a juvenile detention center for "taking no prisoners."


Huh? I don't think my kid is "brainwashed" because he has been told by the school, and by me, that he is to inform a teacher, adult or me if he is being bullied. In fact, I would consider that "sticking up for himself".

Oh, yes telling a teacher ALWAYS works. :rolleyes: That is not always realistic.


So completely wrong in every possible way. We do not live in a vigilante society where we attack others. We have laws(code of conduct - for schools) that if followed, keep us relatively safe. A bully does not "attack more" if their behavior is relayed to a responsible adult. In fact, the opposite generally occurs. And others do not join in with the bully and become bullies themselves because of a student doing the responsible thing. For me, the above comment was the most bizarre and uninformed comment of this entire thread.

How many bullies have you dealt with? A bully will most certainly "attack more" if the kid runs to mom or the teacher. Some bullies see this as a sign of weakness and it just makes them feel bigger and stronger and more able to torment their victim. DS had one, he told every teacher, principal, we even went to the boy's parents. NOTHING stopped it. DS hit him with a football helmet. Kid never bothered him again. We have laws in this country, yes. But we are also allowed to defend ourselves.




To the OP - the way you handled this situation is commendable. Your children are lucky to have you as a mother. There is nothing wimpy about teaching our children how to deal with bullying behavior in a civilized manner. Your children will be the better because of your excellent parenting.

As to the bully - I used to work in a school setting. I also have a child who has been on the receiving end of a few isolated bullying incidents. In my experience, I have found almost always that bullies are scared (and sometimes abused or neglected) kids. There is a reason they behave the way they do. It is because they have extremely low self esteem. I know many on this thread will find me wimpy or "living in la-la land" for saying this, but often times showing the bully kindness or listening to them goes a very long way in curbing their behavior. I speak from personal experience.

I do agree that bullies are often mistreated at home and/or have a very low self-esteem. DS's bully had no friends and was jealous of ds's ability to make friends with everyone he met. That did not excuse it and knowing it didn't help. DS even tried to include the kid in stuff, that didn't help. All that was happening was that he was tearing down ds's self esteem. All a bully knows is agression and sometimes agression in return is what will put a halt to thier actions.

I bet this girl doesnt' mess with the OP's son again.
 
If schools are being so tough on bullies why are we still getting CHILDREN committing suicide over bullying.
And yet, somehow I do not see your theory of open warfare on bullies as a solution.
Also speaking from experience the only way to deal with a bully is to thump back.
No. That is one way to deal with a bully, but it should be the last way you deal with a bully. All proper avenues should be tried first (informing a parent, the school, etc.).
Showing kindess is seen as weakness telling parents and teachers gets other kids joining in on the bullying, in fact telling the teachers and my parents complaining to the head teacher got him in on the bullying as well so I ended up with several teachers and the head teacher plus the original bullies.
I don't know you, so this is a bit awkward, but I do believe that you are lying. I highly doubt that several teachers joined up with the bully against you. I'm sorry, but after that bizarre accusation, I can't take anything you say seriously.
I am fed up with the excuses made for bullying if you where on the street and someone hit you its assault if its in school well the "bully" has low self image to put up with it.
Schools are not telling students to "put up with it". They are telling students to report the behavior so that they may deal with it.
She deserved what she got because she was being a bully. What she was saying doesn't matter. He did not intend for her to end up with a broken nose.
No, she did not deserve a broken nose. She deserved to be disciplined by the school(detention or suspension). I still think it sad that an adult would think a teen would deserve a broken nose for taunting another child. Her behavior was absolutely wrong, and the little boy did not mean for her nose to get broken. According to the OP, the little boy felt bad that her nose was broken. At least this 7 year old child has the maturity and compassion to understand that what she was doing was wrong, but not deserving of physical damage to her face. It's really sad that adults can't see what is obvious to a 7 year old child.
Zero tolerance does NOT keep it from happening.
Yes, it does in many situations. In a recent incident with my son, the bully was suspended for five days with the knowledge that if another incident happened upon his return, he would be transferred to an alternative school. He was also switched out of my son's class. I haven't had a problem since. Same thing with an incident a few years ago. I used the proper avenues, the school dealt with it and the problem was resolved. My point is that using the proper avenues should be utilized first. Physical violence should be a last resort if defending yourself from physical harm.
I can assure you that defending yourself from a female bully at 7 is not going to give you a "wife beater" mentality. That is stretching things a bit much.
In the OP's case, no. I'm sure that child will not get a "wife beater" mentality form this incident. This is because he is blessed with responsible parents that are teaching him how to handle himself with maturity in situation like this. Now, some of the other posters on this thread who are telling their kids that it doesn't matter if it is a girl or boy, just swing away - that is sending a horrible message to their kids and very well could lead to them resorting to violence, whether against a boy or girl, in situations that do not require a physical response.
Oh, yes telling a teacher ALWAYS works. That is not always realistic.
Most parents can still figure out a better solution, than resorting to violence. If the teacher is not responsive, then you go higher up - an assistant principal, the school principal, the school board. Someone will listen. After all the school shootings, violence, etc., bullying is taken much more seriously than in the past. No school is going to open themselves up for a lawsuit for failing to act against a bully.

How many bullies have you dealt with? A bully will most certainly "attack more" if the kid runs to mom or the teacher. Some bullies see this as a sign of weakness and it just makes them feel bigger and stronger and more able to torment their victim. DS had one, he told every teacher, principal, we even went to the boy's parents. NOTHING stopped it. DS hit him with a football helmet. Kid never bothered him again. We have laws in this country, yes. But we are also allowed to defend ourselves.
I've worked with several bullies. My first degree was in teaching. Through college and a couple of years after, I worked as an assistant and counselor at a private school. You are wrong on your "attack more" theory. That may happen, but I doubt it is the norm. Your experience was unfortunate and unusual that after taking it up with the school principal, it still wasn't rectified. As I pointed out above in the incidents involving my son, the situation was rectified by the school becoming aware of the situation. In my experiences dealing with other bullies on the job, us being informed of the behavior did not increase the bullying, rather the behavior was halted.

I do agree that bullies are often mistreated at home and/or have a very low self-esteem. DS's bully had no friends and was jealous of ds's ability to make friends with everyone he met. That did not excuse it and knowing it didn't help. DS even tried to include the kid in stuff, that didn't help. All that was happening was that he was tearing down ds's self esteem. All a bully knows is agression and sometimes agression in return is what will put a halt to thier actions.
I think it is wrong to make a blanket statement like that. We had a similar incident several years ago with a bully and I had my son include him when he passed out his birthday invitations to the class. At the party, the "bully" was the most well mannered kid there. He wanted to help with everything. He was so excited to be at the party. He made a comment to me that nobody had ever invited him to a party before. It was really sad. My son did become friends with him, and he truly was a sweet child. It later came to light that the mother's boyfriend of this "bully" was physically abusing him, which is probably why he was lashing out at the world. I remember one of the last times I saw him, he had a black eye and big bruise on his arm. It was one of the worst days of my life - having to call cps. Yes, originally he was a bully, but he really was an extremely scared young boy, and once shown kindness he responded positively. So no - "all a bully knows is aggression" is false.



I'm not saying that anyone should put up with bullying behavior. I'm merely saying that there are better ways in dealing with a bully, than physical retaliation. And teaching this, will only better our children as they grow up.
 
If schools are being so tough on bullies why are we still getting CHILDREN committing suicide over bullying. Also speaking from experience the only way to deal with a bully is to thump back. Showing kindess is seen as weakness telling parents and teachers gets other kids joining in on the bullying, in fact telling the teachers and my parents complaining to the head teacher got him in on the bullying as well so I ended up with several teachers and the head teacher plus the original bullies. I am fed up with the excuses made for bullying if you where on the street and someone hit you its assault if its in school well the "bully" has low self image to put up with it.

I agree that schools don't do enough to stop bullying. Yesterday morning a 16 year old boy near here committed suicide because of an inappropriate picture of him thats been spreading the school for 2 weeks. It's a sad and tragic reality that happens in every school, with little help. One of my sons friend in 5th grade is also getting bullied and he DID go to a teacher about it, she told him to stop tattling. I wonder why it takes something so tragic for the schools to wake up and see whats happening, and take action against it. They all have a no bullying policy, and most don't do enough to enforce it. They all have that mentality of it doesn't happen here.
 
And yet, somehow I do not see your theory of open warfare on bullies as a solution.
I agree with this

Schools are not telling students to "put up with it". They are telling students to report the behavior so that they may deal with it.

Many schools still do nothing to stop bullying.

Yes, it does in many situations. In a recent incident with my son, the bully was suspended for five days with the knowledge that if another incident happened upon his return, he would be transferred to an alternative school. He was also switched out of my son's class. I haven't had a problem since. Same thing with an incident a few years ago. I used the proper avenues, the school dealt with it and the problem was resolved. My point is that using the proper avenues should be utilized first. Physical violence should be a last resort if defending yourself from physical harm.


You state that you haven't had a problem since. However you also state that he was switched out of your son's class. Did you think maybe that's why you haven't had a problem and that he may have just moved on to another child to bully?

Most parents can still figure out a better solution, than resorting to violence. If the teacher is not responsive, then you go higher up - an assistant principal, the school principal, the school board. Someone will listen. After all the school shootings, violence, etc., bullying is taken much more seriously than in the past. No school is going to open themselves up for a lawsuit for failing to act against a bully.


I agree that there are certainly other ways to handle a situation. Am also glad to hear that your son attends a school where something is done to stop bullying. However just because his school addresses the situations, all schools do not. Many schools still do nothing to prevent or stop bullying. It is a serious problem in schools today and needs to be taken more seriously. My son and 3 of his classmates were having problems earlier this year with bullying as well. After about 3 weeks of talks with them and nothing being done, they finally moved all 4 boys to different classes. Yes this stopped the bullying of these 4 but what did it teach the bully? There are still problems in that classroom, just now with other students. I don't have an answer of how to stop it, but I do know that the schools need to do more. I don't agree with violence, but I'm also not blind to the fact that bullying is a major problem in the school districts today.
l
 
Many schools still do nothing to stop bullying.
Some schools may not do as much as others or may not be as successful as others, but I am fairly certain that there are not schools that have just given up all together and do absolutely nothing - giving the bullies free reign. That statement is just a "cop out" excuse to give kids permission to respond with violence.
You state that you haven't had a problem since. However you also state that he was switched out of your son's class. Did you think maybe that's why you haven't had a problem and that he may have just moved on to another child to bully?
Yes, I did maybe think that. In fact, that is one of the reasons I stated as to how the school took care of the bullying. And no, I don't think this gives the bully an opportunity to move on to another child. Our school's code of conduct is quite clear, and if he is found to be bullying again, he will be removed from the school.
I agree that there are certainly other ways to handle a situation. Am also glad to hear that your son attends a school where something is done to stop bullying. However just because his school addresses the situations, all schools do not. Many schools still do nothing to prevent or stop bullying. It is a serious problem in schools today and needs to be taken more seriously. My son and 3 of his classmates were having problems earlier this year with bullying as well. After about 3 weeks of talks with them and nothing being done, they finally moved all 4 boys to different classes. Yes this stopped the bullying of these 4 but what did it teach the bully? There are still problems in that classroom, just now with other students. I don't have an answer of how to stop it, but I do know that the schools need to do more. I don't agree with violence, but I'm also not blind to the fact that bullying is a major problem in the school districts today.
Bullying is a serious problem. Each situation is unique. Different schools have different ways of handling this issue. I don't think any schools totally ignore the issue.

My point, as it pertains to this thread is that many posters on here seem to want their kids to strike back as a first choice, rather than seeking an alternative method. I find this mindset to be wrong on many levels. It makes the school's job harder if parents are advising their children to hit others. And after having their little snowflakes hit others, they will be the first to stand up and complain about violence in schools.
 
And yet, somehow I do not see your theory of open warfare on bullies as a solution.

No. That is one way to deal with a bully, but it should be the last way you deal with a bully. All proper avenues should be tried first (informing a parent, the school, etc.).

I don't know you, so this is a bit awkward, but I do believe that you are lying. I highly doubt that several teachers joined up with the bully against you. I'm sorry, but after that bizarre accusation, I can't take anything you say seriously.
I was went to a school where the head teacher was odd to say the least another child had his jaw broken by one of the thugs he thought needed help with their "self esteem" he had to stay at school because the head wouldn't let him leave. I was bullied by these thugs, my mother went to the head to complain after I was pushed in the road out side school, fortunatly the car driver managed to stop but my "punishment" for this incident was to be put in detention for a week. After this I got told any test I did well on I had to be cheating, in an religious education class the teacher said out loud this stupid idiot believes in heaven and hell and when I was 12 the head told me if I was a stupid as you I would kill myself. I went into that school a happy confident child by the time I left all I wanted to do was die but hay if you think that you know so much about my childhood to make the assumption that I am lying all I can say is up yours. If yur read what other people have said about their children being bullied they have done the right thing they have spoken to the teachers, they have gone through the rigmoral that schools use to maintain they have a zero tolerence to bullying and in the end the only thing that has stopped it was when the victim finally faught back. Punish the bully, kick them out of school if need be but "friending" them does not work. Lastly here is a reason why telling teachers doesn't always work

I agree that schools don't do enough to stop bullying. Yesterday morning a 16 year old boy near here committed suicide because of an inappropriate picture of him thats been spreading the school for 2 weeks. It's a sad and tragic reality that happens in every school, with little help. One of my sons friend in 5th grade is also getting bullied and he DID go to a teacher about it, she told him to stop tattling. I wonder why it takes something so tragic for the schools to wake up and see whats happening, and take action against it. They all have a no bullying policy, and most don't do enough to enforce it. They all have that mentality of it doesn't happen here.
 
I was went to a school where the head teacher was odd to say the least another child had his jaw broken by one of the thugs he thought needed help with their "self esteem" he had to stay at school because the head wouldn't let him leave. I was bullied by these thugs, my mother went to the head to complain after I was pushed in the road out side school, fortunatly the car driver managed to stop but my "punishment" for this incident was to be put in detention for a week. After this I got told any test I did well on I had to be cheating, in an religious education class the teacher said out loud this stupid idiot believes in heaven and hell and when I was 12 the head told me if I was a stupid as you I would kill myself. I went into that school a happy confident child by the time I left all I wanted to do was die but hay if you think that you know so much about my childhood to make the assumption that I am lying all I can say is up yours. If yur read what other people have said about their children being bullied they have done the right thing they have spoken to the teachers, they have gone through the rigmoral that schools use to maintain they have a zero tolerence to bullying and in the end the only thing that has stopped it was when the victim finally faught back. Punish the bully, kick them out of school if need be but "friending" them does not work. Lastly here is a reason why telling teachers doesn't always work

I agree that schools don't do enough to stop bullying. Yesterday morning a 16 year old boy near here committed suicide because of an inappropriate picture of him thats been spreading the school for 2 weeks. It's a sad and tragic reality that happens in every school, with little help. One of my sons friend in 5th grade is also getting bullied and he DID go to a teacher about it, she told him to stop tattling. I wonder why it takes something so tragic for the schools to wake up and see whats happening, and take action against it. They all have a no bullying policy, and most don't do enough to enforce it. They all have that mentality of it doesn't happen here.
:confused3 I could barely comprehend that post due to the extremely long run on sentences and grammatical errors. I usually don't point them out because I know we all type fast and don't always spell check when posting. Your previous posts were comprehendible, however. This one was so bizarre that I felt the need to apply the "quote rule".

The bottom portion of your post appears to be taken directly from melissapealo's post (#95). I guess this is your "proof positive" as to why your "violent retaliation" theory is correct?:confused3 As I stated in an earlier post - telling a teacher may not always work. If a teacher is ignoring your concerns, go higher up. Also, the poster used in your example does not know for sure what is happening. She is talking about a friend of her son. Whoever is telling her this information may feel this way, but who knows what the actual facts are.

I guess all you can say is "up yours" then. After getting through the above post, I still do not believe you. Earlier in this thread, I was annoyed by your comments advocating violence. After reading the above rambling post, I just feel sorry for you. There seems to be something deeper going on.
 
I'm with you, Wall-E.

I've worked with many different children, too. Some bullies are thugs who just want to hurt others. Some have been bullied themselves by kids at school. Some are abused by their parents and have learned to behave this way. Each child needs to be dealt with differently because each child is different. Yes, all bullying should have consequences, but the reason behind the bullying should be researched, to help the child stop these behaviors.

Bullies are kids, too. And they deserve just as much help as those kids being bullied. Hate bullying, don't hate the bullies.
 

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