6:28:00 PM EDT
Feeling Worried
Nearly half of teachers admit bullying students
This study really resonated with me because of my fourth grade teacher. For some reason, she did not like me and seemed to pick on me a lot. She did that with a lot of kids, and I remember crying in her class a great deal. She also made everyone raise their hands on Monday morning and tell what church they went to, and then go on to extol the virtues of her own particular church (Church of Christ, it was...sigh...) She made fun of the way I dressed, and picked on my accent, too. She also hated that we were Democrats (how did she know? Again, the hand raising..."who are your parents voting for?") and that some of my ancestors had supported the Union (some were Confederates, too...)
Funny how almost forty years later I can still remember this. Adults forget how much power their words have over children.
Nearly half of elementary school teachers admit to bullying
HOUSTON, TX—(June 27, 2006)
Nearly half of elementary school teachers surveyed about bullying in schools, admitted to bullying students, according to a study in the May issue of The International Journal of Social Psychiatry.
The study surveyed 116 teachers from seven elementary schools. While more than 70 percent of teachers believed that bullying was isolated, an estimated 45 percent of teachers admitted to bullying a student themselves.
“It didn’t surprise me that nearly half of teachers admitted to bullying, because they are aware it is a problem,” says former teacher Stuart Twemlow , M.D., lead author of the study and director of the Peaceful Schools and Communities Project of the Child and Family Program at The Menninger Clinic. “Teachers need methods and help with disciplining children. The tragedy is that school districts rarely give teachers any help with discipline. They learn it by the seat of their pants.”
Dr. Twemlow is professor of psychiatry of the Menninger Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences at Baylor College of Medicine. Peter Fonagy, Ph.D., collaborated with him on the study. Dr. Fonagy directs the Menninger Child and Family Program and is the Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis and director of Clinical Health Psychology at University College London.
Drs. Twemlow and Fonagy surveyed teachers who taught kindergarten through fifth grade. They asked teachers about their job satisfaction, experience with bullying teachers, personal experience bullying students and being bullied by students and whether or not schools had a written procedure for handling problem teachers.
The authors found a strong correlation between teachers who were bullied in their past and teachers who bully students. The findings suggest that teachers, who were bullied while they were children, are more likely to be trapped in bully-victim relationships as adults and are more alert to the bullying of others around them.
“If your early experiences lead you to expect that people will not reason, but respond to force, then you are at risk of recreating this situation in your classroom,” says Dr. Fonagy. “The climate you remember from your childhood may even make you feel safe because it is familiar and consistent with your expectations.”
Additional study authors include Frank C. Sacco, Ph.D., president of the Community Services Institute and adjunct professor at Western New England College , and John R. Brethour Jr., formerly with the statistical laboratory of The Menninger Clinic’s Child and Family Program. Research was supported by Menninger’s Child & Family Program and Baylor College of Medicine.
See more information on The Menninger Clinic’s Child and Family Program on the Menninger Web site. For a full text copy of the article contact Anissa Orr , media relations specialist for The Menninger Clinic, phone: 713-275-5038.
The Menninger Clinic is an international specialty psychiatric center, providing innovative programs in treatment, research and education. Founded in 1925 in Kansas , Menninger relocated to Houston in 2003 and is affiliated with Baylor College of Medicine and The Methodist Hospital. For 14 consecutive years, Menninger has been named among the leading psychiatric hospitals in U.S. News & World Report’s annual ranking of America ’s Best Hospitals.
Written by hestiahomeschool Blog about this entry
-
Some teachers must end up going in the field because they are all into control. Very sad.
xoxo -
Scary. I remember at least one myself. I agree with you, it is sad adults forget their ability to leave such an impression. It's too bad they don't leave more positive ones. Hugs, ~ Lori
-
Just one more reason I left the teaching profession and I will be homeschooling! Bunch of crazy people! Your fourth grade teacher sounds like a disturbed woman.
Traci -
I have had a lot of "bullying teachers." I think that they often use it as a form of punishment since they can't do much else, not that it makes it ok. I think students also bully teachers too. Today's generation of kids as a whole is a whole lot more disrespectful and rude than most in the past and parents seem to be less inclined to do anything about it.
http://blog.myspace.com/poptartcoco
7/1/06 12:30 PM