Bullying
What Is Bullying?
Bullying happens when individuals or group of people continues to hurt, frighten, threaten, or exclude another person on purpose. It’s often a repeated activity, with a particular child singled out over and over again.
Bullying involves an imbalance of power, where the child who bullies has more power (due to factors like age, size, or higher social status) than the targeted child.
There’s not just one profile of a child who is bullied—any child can be singled out for any reason.
Articles About Bullying
Battling Bullying: A Whole School Approach
By Lisa Walls
Bullying and Sexual Harrassment in Schools
By Lisa Walls
Bullying Prevention in the Schools
An interview with Barbara Coloroso, author of The Bully, the Bullied, and the Bystander
Dealing with Workplace Bullying
By Committee for Children Staff
Keep Bullying off the Bus by Empowering Kids
By Committee for Children Staff
Kid Power Is the Answer to Verbal, Physical Harassment
By Dennis Murphy for Counseling Today
Trainers Answer Five Top Bullying Questions
By Steve Plunk and Corrina Skildum
"That's So Gay" Is Not Okay
By Committee for Children Staff
What Parents Should Know About Bullying
By Committee for Children Staff
Why Don't Kids Report Bullying?
By Miriam Hirschstein, Ph.D.

