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3.9.3 Countering Bullying

SCOPE OF THIS CHAPTER

This procedure applies to children placed in children's homes and foster homes managed by the authority, but the principles apply to the placement of all looked after children. Therefore, where children are placed with parents, relatives or friends or in placements not managed by the authority, the social worker must ensure these or other adequate procedures are applied.

There is a suite of guidance from the DfE, Safe from Bullying: Guidance and Training Resources for Tackling Bullying Outside Schools, which includes guidance for various settings.


Contents

  1. Definition of Bullying
  2. Home's Strategies
  3. General
  4. Risk Assessment and Placement Planning
  5. Countering Bullying Day-to-Day
  6. Notifications
  7. Involving Children
  8. Recording


1. Definition of Bullying

Bullying happens within a relationship involving some form of hurtful abuse of power.

It can be:

  • verbal e.g. name-calling
  • social e.g. being left out of things/being ignored
  • material e.g. possessions stolen/property damaged or destroyed
  • mental e.g. threats or pressure to conform
  • physical e.g. being assaulted


2. Home's Strategies

Each home/foster carer should have strategies for countering bullying, depending on the needs of the child or children living there and these strategies should be communicated to children placed with them.


3. General

Everyone involved in looking after children share responsibility for countering bullying and for creating a culture that positively encourages acceptable behaviour and reduces or prevents the likelihood of bullying.

As part of this ethos, everyone must understand what bullying means and what measures should be taken within the home and by staff/carers to counter it.

Everyone should also be clear what measures they should take if they suspect bullying or it is reported to them.

In this respect, everyone should be alert to the fact that bullying may constitute Significant Harm and, if so, must be reported under the London Child Protection Procedures.


4. Risk Assessment and Placement Planning

As part of the placement planning process, the child's social worker must ensure that a risk assessment is conducted to ascertain whether the child may be a victim or perpetrator of bullying.

If there is any risk, the child should have a Behaviour Management Plan, as part of the Placement Information Record, outlining the concerns and strategies to be adopted to counter it.


5. Countering Bullying Day-to-day

Staff/carers must be alert at all times to the possibility of bullying.

If they have any concerns, they must discuss them with their manager/supervising social worker and take what actions are necessary to reduce or prevent it.

If the bullying is persistent or serious, the child's social worker should be consulted and it may be necessary to conduct a review of the placement or hold a Strategy Discussion.

If the social worker is unavailable, the residential staff/foster carers may take what immediate actions are necessary to reduce or prevent bullying from occurring and inform their manager/supervising social worker and the child's social worker as soon as practicable.


6. Notifications

There are different notifications procedures depending on the persistence and seriousness of the bullying:

6.1 Notifications of Minor or Non-persistent Bullying

Where bullying is not persistent or not serious, it should be notified to the manager/supervising social worker at the first opportunity; the manager/supervising social worker will inform the child's social worker, unless it has previously been agreed this is not necessary.

6.2 Notifications of Persistent or Serious Bullying

Serious, one-off, episodes of bullying are deemed to be incidents and must be notified to the manager/supervising social worker and the child's social worker as soon as possible but within 24 hours. The child's social worker should decide whether to inform the child's parent(s) and, if so, who should do so.

Where serious bullying persists, the social worker, manager/supervising social worker and staff/carer should come to a decision about whether it is deemed to be an incident and whether the child's social worker should be notified on each occasion or at specified intervals.

It will also be necessary to decide whether to notify the child's parent(s). These arrangements must be outlined in the child's Behaviour Management Plan, in the Placement Information Record.

If the bullying is serious or persists, the child's social worker should consider whether the bullying constitutes Significant Harm. If this is likely, a referral should be considered under the London Child Protection Procedures.


7. Involving Children

It is important to offer appropriate support and reassurance to children who are bullied by communicating well with them. Counselling should also be offered.

Where children have bullied others, the focus should be on the behaviour rather than the child and full explorations made of reasons for the behaviour. Children should be encouraged to see the bullied child's point of view. A written agreement should be drawn up by the child's social worker to outline the strategies to be employed to challenge and modify the behaviour.

Both bullied and those who bully should be closely monitored within their placement.


8. Recording

There are different recording procedures depending on the persistence and seriousness of the bullying.

8.1 Recording of Minor or Non-persistent Bullying

Minor or non-persistent bullying should be recorded in the Daily Record of the child who is bullied and the alleged bully. The record should include details of staff/carer intervention and outcomes.

8.2 Recording of Persistent or Serious Bullying

Unless otherwise agreed between the social worker, manager and staff/carer, and set out in the child's Behaviour Management Plan, incidents of persistent or serious bullying must always be recorded as incidents and be the subject of a management review. Please see Incidents Guidance.

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