Bullying Washington DC

Bullying is when one child picks on another child repeatedly. Bullying can be physical, verbal, or social. It can happen at school, on the playground, on the school bus, in the neighborhood, or over the Internet.

Local Companies

Briley Philip L Phd
(301) 856-1486
7700 Old Branch
Clinton, MD
Von Wald Toffolo Dorothy Phd
(301) 856-6000
10403 Hospital
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Michael Papantones
(301) 449-6532
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Psychological Center - Philip L Briley
(301) 856-1486
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Clinton, MD
Harshaw Smith Psychotherapy
(301) 877-0098
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Bluewater Physiatry
(301) 877-0805
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Beyond Excellence
(301) 249-6110
15416 Norwalk Ct
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Campbell Psychological Services
(301) 218-1580
3012 Mitchellville
Bowie, MD
Downs Mary Boston Phd
(301) 292-5020
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Hammond Gladys Dr Psycholgst
(301) 292-0550
804 Cascade
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  • Bullying is when one child picks on another child repeatedly. Bullying can be physical, verbal, or social. It can happen at school, on the playground, on the school bus, in the neighborhood, or over the Internet.
  • When your child Is bullied help your child learn how to respond by teaching your child how to:
      1.Look the bully in the eye.
      2.Stand tall and stay calm in a difficult situation.
      3.Walk away
  • Teach your child how to say in a firm voice:
      1."I don't like what you are doing".
      2."Please do NOT talk to me like that."
      3."Why would you say that?"
  • Teach your child when and how to ask for help.
  • Encourage your child to make friends with other children.
  • Support activities that interest your child.
  • Alert school officials to the problems and work with them on solutions.
  • Make sure an adult who knows about the bullying can watch out for your child's safety and well-being when you cannot be there.

When your child is the bully

  • Be sure your child knows that bullying is never OK.
  • Set firm and consistent limits on your child's aggressive behavior.
  • Be a positive role mode. Show children they can get what they want without teasing, threatening or hurting someone.
  • Use effective, non-physical discipline, such as loss of privileges.
  • Develop practical solutions with the school principal, teachers, counselors, and parents of the children your child has bullied.

When your child is a bystander

  • Tell your child not to cheer on or even quietly watch bullying.
  • Encourage your child to tell a trusted adult about the bullying.
  • Help your child support other children who may be bullied.
  • Encourage your child to include these children in activities.
  • Encourage your child to join with others in telling bullies to stop.

Source: American Academy of Pediatrics - www.aap.org

Read article at SixtySecondParent.com

Featured Local Company

Briley Philip L Phd

3018561486
7700 Old Branch
Clinton, MD

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