Anonymous wrote:I don’t see more bullying. I think that this particular group of gen z kids though spent too much time on screens during a formative age and also during an era that was over the top “over sensitive” to things like race and pronouns.
As a group they tend to be sarcastic, their humor is more caustic and they have over corrected against some of the PC everything is racist/anti trans/ableist that was being pushed a few years ago. So I have noticed more insensitivity in this group, but not specifically bullying unless you are one of those people that thinks every time someone is rude or mean it is bullying.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t see more bullying. I think that this particular group of gen z kids though spent too much time on screens during a formative age and also during an era that was over the top “over sensitive” to things like race and pronouns.
As a group they tend to be sarcastic, their humor is more caustic and they have over corrected against some of the PC everything is racist/anti trans/ableist that was being pushed a few years ago. So I have noticed more insensitivity in this group, but not specifically bullying unless you are one of those people that thinks every time someone is rude or mean it is bullying.
Anonymous wrote:I heard a great episode of Lisa Damour's podcast about how friend groups use social exclusion of someone in the group to ostracize that person and bond more tightly with each other. She has a tendency to not come to conclusions with some of her episodes, and this one didn't have a recommendation for what teens on the receiving end of this treatment should do. However, I found it quite validating if you're someone who has gone through the maddening agony of this situation.
My other DD is younger and I'm seeing 3rd-5th graders emulate this kind of bullying and using techniques that are incredibly sneaky, manipulative and sophisticated given their age. I assume they are copying older siblings.
Anonymous wrote: My teacher friend says that this year and last year have been the worst years of her career. There has been more bullying than pre-Covid and earlier in her career. I subbed at some high schools and middle schools this year. Here are some things that I've seen or that my friend has mentioned:
It seems like the bullies know that they will get in more trouble if they bully a child with obvious special needs, so they target a kid who is NT but is quieter, introverted, has confidence issues, and maybe doesn't have the "right" clothes or doesn't have a ton of friends. The bully pretends to be friends with their victim, gets some info about the target, and then uses it to spread rumors. My kid says that it is common for kids to have group chats to talk badly about someone else. I've also noticed that whenever a less popular kid answers a question, the more popular kids will snicker quietly or make faces. Kids are so cliquey and less likely to invite a new kid to sit with them at lunch or to an event. That kid becomes a loner and then the other kids gossip about that kid. I feel like the prevalence of bullying is what is causing the teen mental health crisis. If the victim reports the incident, in some cases I have seen school admin accuse the victim of "stirring up drama" and that they need to learn "how to be more well-liked."
I feel that because physical bullying is becoming less common, schools assume they don't have a bullying problem until it is too late, and the bullying is rampant. I don't know if taking phones out of schools is the answer considering that I have subbed at schools that don't allow phones at all and I have still seen just as much bullying as schools with phones. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:They will target those with mild SN-definitely. If they can't get away with being nasty, they one favorite way to covertly bully is to make the kid with mild SN think he/she is the coolest person ever and to get the kid to do humiliating things often while being filmed. Then it gets passed around the teen/tween is laughed at, but to his/her face they make it sound like it's the coolest video ever. I have seen far to many teachers try to convince parents their kid is not a victim at all and really how do you prove that the kid who fist bumps and invited the kid to lunch is also abusing trust and humiliating that same kid.