You would think that you’d be able to spot if your child was being bullied – that your Mum radar would switch on and you would surely know.
You’d hope your child would tell you. But it turns out that this isn’t the case.
A major study by the Australian Institute of Family Studies has shown that for more than 50 per cent of children who said they had been bullied, their parents were “either not aware or did not consider the actions were bullying”.
Fifty per cent.
That’s half of all kids who have been bullied – Mum and Dad didn’t know.
With one in three children under 10 reporting experiencing bullying that’s an awful lot of sad, broken children whose parents can’t help them because they simply do not know.
There are a lot of reasons that kids don’t tell their parents – embarrassment, fear of being in trouble, fear of making a fuss, concerns their parents won’t believe them or won’t listen.
Some kids have reported that they did tell their parents but the methods they were given to deal with the situation simply didn’t work.
So they resigned themselves to the bullying.
It’s heartbreaking.
Parenting is bloody hard. Andrew Daddo and Holly Wainwright are here to help you through. Post continues…
It is up to us as parents to be vigilant in recognising the signs of bullying in our children – in the hope that we can stop it before it has serious effects.
Australia’s foremost authority on bullying, Ken Rigby, has given Mamamia some tips to help watch out for signs your child is being bullied.
1. Unexplainable injuries.
There may be a simple explanation but if your child struggles to explain how that bruise, the limp or the bloody nose occurred then it is worth investigating more.