Schools do not take bullying seriously. Teachers do not take bullying seriously. Yard duties do not take bullying seriously. It doesn’t matter how much they say they do. They are so used to hearing it that they are deaf to it. If you have a possibility of home schooling your child, do it. If you don’t, then do all you can to be at the playground when your chidren are out there, seeing to it they are safe. Hire someone if you must. I was a one-on-one teacher’s aid for a child with asperger’s syndrome, who, I was told got bullied at times. At the same time, I was instructed not to stay too close to him at recess, so he could learn to fend for himself. Fortunately, his mom sent the boy’s caregiver from home to be with him at lunch recess. I saw that it was a good idea.
I don’t trust public schools any more. Both my boys were seriously bullied at school. When my 7-year-old cried every morning that he didn’t want to go to schoiol, and asked me (several times) to do him a favor and kill him so he wouldn’t have to be bullied any more, I took him out of school and started home schooling. I’m glad I did. He was much happier after that, and so was I.
When I saw my state preschool teacher bullying the pre-school children, I took my second son out of school, with the advice of his pediatrician. So I home schooled both sons for several years. The first three months my second son was back in junior high, he was beaten up on the school ground every day, because he liked Pokemon. Finally he told me about it, and the administrators did suspend the culprit, but they didn’t put any more teachers out to supervise the students during the lunch hour, which is what was needed.
What is needed is a good strong dose of the Word of God in our schools: “Do unto others as you would have others do unto you.”