Schools
The Menace Of Bullying: What Valley View Parents Are Saying
A Patch survey shows broad concern over the bullying of school-aged kids, both locally and state wide.
ROMEOVILLE, IL — An informal survey of Patch readers whose children attend Valley View School District and other local schools shows parents' concern over bullying and their suggestions and tips for combating the scourge. The survey results were part of a larger look at bullying, with parents throughout the Midwest signaling that bullying — in school and over social media — is a significant problem.
The regional parent survey, timed to coincide with National Bullying Prevention Month in October, was posted on dozens of Patch sites in Illinois and across the Midwest. The survey is not scientific, but could be considered a broad indicator of parents' feelings about the seriousness of bullying in their schools and communities.
As of Friday, Oct. 18, more than 460 parents had responded to this regional Patch survey. The key findings were:
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- Nearly 71 percent of parents said their children had been bullied at least once.
- Nearly 65 percent had been bullied this school year.
- More than 56 percent of parents said their child had been bullied by name calling, while nearly 34 percent say their child has been bullied via text, social media or other electronic communication.

Survey respondents with students enrolled in Valley View schools said the district should do more to address bullying, whether through assemblies or seminars. One respondent said they would like to see the district enforce existing discipline for bullying.
"Teach kids how to treat one another and penalize school staff that fails to enforce policy," the respondent said. (Four survey respondents who said they had kids enrolled at Valley View answered the written portion of the survey.)
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These informal findings should be compared to statistics compiled in more scientific surveys that note:
- Bullying affects 1 in 3 U.S. schoolchildren (NoBully.org)
- 59 percent of U.S. students experience cyberbullying (Pew Research Center)
- 160,000 kids stay home from school every day to avoid bullies, National Association of School Psychologists
The Menace Of Bullies: Patch Advocacy Reporting Project
As part of a national reporting project, Patch has been looking at society's roles and responsibilities in bullying and a child's unthinkable decision to end their own life in hopes we might offer solutions that save lives.
Do you have a story to tell? Are you concerned about how your local schools handle bullies and their victims? Email us at bullies@patch.com and share your views in the comments.
Selected Stories From The Project
- Bullied To Death: When Kids Kill With Words
- I Could Have Been Mallory Grossman
- Bullied Over Homemade T-Shirt, Kid Inspires University Of Tennessee Design
- America's Shameful Truth About School Shooters And Bullying
- Cyberbullying Most Often Affects Girls; These Women Are Trying To Stop It
- Bullying Kids: Straighten Up, Or Your Parents May Have To Pay Up
- Teen Who Killed Himself Wasn't 'Worthless,' Family Tells Bullies
- Menace Of Bullies: Why This Woman Resigned Her 6-Figure Job
- Survivor Of Bullying And Suicide Writes Frankly About Both
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