bullying at school

The summer edition of Communication has an article on page 43 on bullying. I was rather shocked by this because it simply divided bullying into three main categories (physical, verbal and indirect) and then proceeded to offer advice for dealing with conventional bullying.

My perception of bullying where people on the spectrum are the victims is rather different from this. I wondered if other contributors felt the same way or disagreed.

In my perspective, people on the spectrum are usually bullied by people taking advantage of their vulnerabilities arising from autism - sensory overload, difficulty understanding social interaction and metaphorical or humorous remarks, special interests and manerisms that attract attention. I also perceive the bullying to involve a wider spectrum of individuals in a class, not just the usually identified bullies.

People on the spectrum may be seen as entertaining. Sensitivity to environment - sudden noise, people in close proximity, sudden movement, intimidatory atmosphere is enough to trigger considerable distress and possibly a meltdown. Other kids quickly realise that "pushing the right buttons" - mainipulating the vulnerabilities of people on the spectrum, could be managed as collective entertainment.

Being seen as different, not fitting in, having different interests, having unorthodox mannerisms, all make people on the spectrum more likely to be targeted. They may be hurt or disturbed by joking remarks or jibes that NT kids would recognise for what they were, but could cause great anxiety to someone on the spectrum.

I rather felt, from reading the Communication article, that it was as if people on the spectrum were just overly sensitive to conventional bullying and just needed to hear the conventional advice. But for someone with communication difficulties "fogging" and saying "No" can just add to the entertainment value as this would come over differently.

I was also concerned that after 50 years NAS seemed not to have grasped that bullying at school is one of the fundamental damaging experiences fior people on the spectrum, and this needs research, not platitudes.

Parents
  • I think it may be a little unfair to say we don't see bullying as serious issue. It was one of the main concerns of the Think Different campaign. It's also something that features regularly in the advice provide by our parent to parent service, the helpline and of course with the advice provided by the Education Rights Service.

    For people who are concerned you may want to read through our advice on bullying in schools - and please, feel free to suggest improvements or changes that we can pass on to the information team responsible for the content. 

    It's also really interesting to hear how you describe bullying Longman, because it relates to a lot of what's mentioned in the video for the Think Differently campaign - if you'd like to take a look here's a link - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tB4J00xkC4

    This was also raised yesterday in the coverage of the latest information from our soon to be published report 'The Way We Are' -
    http://www.autism.org.uk/news-and-events/news-from-the-nas/isolation-and-bullying-50th-report.aspx

    This section looked at the bullying and isolation faced by children and young people. 

    Just wanted to point out where this had been mentioned, it's an incredibly troubling issue that I think we all would like to see movement on.

    Sadly, in an organisation this size with heavy demands on limited resources, there may be times where things are said that don't seem to reflect the full complexity of the situation people face and it's always a shame when that happens.

    Be yeah, be great if people could make possible suggestions - any thread on this discussion is likely to be read by lots of people and if information takes time to update at least they would have already benefitted from the experiences in the community.

Reply
  • I think it may be a little unfair to say we don't see bullying as serious issue. It was one of the main concerns of the Think Different campaign. It's also something that features regularly in the advice provide by our parent to parent service, the helpline and of course with the advice provided by the Education Rights Service.

    For people who are concerned you may want to read through our advice on bullying in schools - and please, feel free to suggest improvements or changes that we can pass on to the information team responsible for the content. 

    It's also really interesting to hear how you describe bullying Longman, because it relates to a lot of what's mentioned in the video for the Think Differently campaign - if you'd like to take a look here's a link - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tB4J00xkC4

    This was also raised yesterday in the coverage of the latest information from our soon to be published report 'The Way We Are' -
    http://www.autism.org.uk/news-and-events/news-from-the-nas/isolation-and-bullying-50th-report.aspx

    This section looked at the bullying and isolation faced by children and young people. 

    Just wanted to point out where this had been mentioned, it's an incredibly troubling issue that I think we all would like to see movement on.

    Sadly, in an organisation this size with heavy demands on limited resources, there may be times where things are said that don't seem to reflect the full complexity of the situation people face and it's always a shame when that happens.

    Be yeah, be great if people could make possible suggestions - any thread on this discussion is likely to be read by lots of people and if information takes time to update at least they would have already benefitted from the experiences in the community.

Children
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