Services
We offer services to the following types of bullying
COMMON TYPES OF BULLYING
Physical Bullying
Physical Bullying involves using bodily force to harm or intimidate someone. This includes hitting, kicking, pushing, tripping, or damaging someone's belongings. To stop it, victims should report the abuse immediately to a teacher, parent, or trusted adult. Schools should create safe environments with supervision and educate students on peaceful ways to resolve conflict.
Verbal Bullying
Verbal Bullying is the use of words to insult, threaten, or degrade someone. It includes name-calling, teasing, hurtful jokes, and verbal threats. The best way to address it is by encouraging victims to speak up, teaching students to use respectful language, and ensuring that repeated offenders face clear consequences under school rules.
Cyberbullying
Cyberbullying occurs through phones, social media, or any digital space. Examples include sending threatening messages, spreading harmful photos, or posting mean content online. To combat it, victims should block the bully, report the content, save evidence, and inform a trusted adult. Digital literacy and online safety education are also essential.
Prejudicial Bullying
Prejudicial Bullying targets someone based on their race, tribe, religion, gender, or disability. It includes mockery, exclusion, or discrimination rooted in bias or hate. Combating it requires strong anti-discrimination rules, open discussions about diversity and respect, and swift action against offenders to protect those affected
Emotional Bullying
Emotional (Psychological) Bullying involves actions that deeply hurt someone’s feelings or mental well-being without using physical force. It includes manipulation, constant criticism, silent treatment, humiliation, or making someone feel worthless. The solution is to provide emotional support to the victim, encourage open communication, and involve a counselor or psychologist to help rebuild confidence and resilience, while ensuring the bully is held accountable.
Sexual Bullying
Sexual Bullying involves unwanted sexual comments, gestures, jokes, or touching. This behavior is harmful and must be reported immediately to teachers, school counselors, or authorities. Schools should teach about consent and boundaries, offer support to victims, and strictly punish perpetrators according to policy and law.
Sibling Bullying
Sibling Bullying happens within families when one sibling repeatedly uses power to harm, intimidate, or control another. This includes physical aggression, name-calling, jealousy-driven behavior, or making the other feel unloved or excluded. Parents or guardians should take all sibling bullying seriously, set clear boundaries, treat children fairly, and if necessary, seek family counseling to stop toxic patterns.
Adult or Teacher Bullying
Adult or teacher bullying occurs when a teacher or authority figure misuses their power to belittle, shame, or unfairly treat a student. Examples include public humiliation, excessive punishment, favoritism, or verbal abuse. To address it, schools should have systems where students can safely report adult mistreatment, involve school administrators in investigating complaints, and train teachers in respectful and professional conduct.