The National Center for Education, Evaluation and Regional Assistance completed a study that indicates that 52.2 percent of America’s 550,000 school bus drivers believe bullying to be a serious problem on their school buses. Unfortunately, two-thirds of bullying incidents remain unreported.
Experts generally recognize three broad forms of bullying. Physical bullying is intentional aggression that involves injury against a person or property. Verbal bullying includes teasing, name-calling, inappropriate sexual comments or threats of harm. Social bullying damages a student’s reputation or relationships.
All school bus drivers should be kept up to date on their district’s rules and policies surrounding bullying. School bus rules should be posted and clearly communicated to all students. The National Association for Pupil Transportation has published free training materials that offer the following tips:
For access to free training materials for teachers, drivers and school administrators, visit the Safe Supportive Learning website or stopbullying.gov.
To learn more about our easy-to-use school transportation software and how it can help your district keep its students safe, speak with one of the BusBoss transportation experts today.
What d o you think? Is your school district training its bus drivers to deal with bullying? If so, what positive impact has this had? Let us know in the comments below!