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Best Answer

1. Without a word, just punch the bully in the nose as hard as you can. This will probably work, but it will probably get you in trouble.

2. Talk with your parents and ask for help. This will probably work, and you will not get in trouble.

A:
  • Talk to your friends about confronting the bully.
  • It's very difficult for a bully to bully four or five people standing together and speaking up confidently.
  • Get all your friends to stand with you and then ask the bully or bullies questions like:
    • Why are you a bully?
    • Why are you bullying me?
    • Bullying is not allowed at school!
    • If you keep going we are going to talk to teachers, parents and the police!

A bit more:

Quite often, bullies are actually unhappy and insecure, and try to hide it by being a bully. Many of them often come from an unhappy home life, so they take their anger, frustrations, and unhappiness out on others. So, you can try one of two things:

1. The next time he comes at you, you can tell him you are sorry they are so unhappy that they have to do all they can to try to make others just as miserable as they are. But do it in front of others so it will shame them into stopping that behavior.

OR:

2. The next time he comes at you, look him in the eye and calmly, but in a confident tone, tell him you and your friends were just about to go for lunch, hang out, etc., and tell him he is welcome to come with you if he likes. Give him just a few seconds to decide, then you and your friends turn and walk away, leaving the decision up to him, but without him (or you) being put on the spot by him having to verbally reply. Making him feel included and welcome will throw him for a loop and really catch him off guard. It may also help him to feel better about himself, which would very possibly help put an end to his need to bully others. It could also be the beginning of him actually changing his ways, and want to be your friend.

Answer

Actually, the best thing is to involve a teacher at the time of the incident. In these days of zero tolerance they have the mandate to follow up. Hopefully, they and the school administration will take verbal and physical bullying seriously. For my son, 20 years ago, the only choice was to remove him from that school. Truly, there is no reason to try to bargain a bully (or a group of them) into behaving properly.

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10y ago
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12y ago

Dont' b just a bystander! b a stand- upper! ok, that sounded cheesy, but it is still very tru. stand up 4 ur friends, or even ppl who u don't rly kno, just stand up 4 wat u believe in. if one of ur friend's is bullying sum1 else say "c'mon dude, that's kinda mean." if someone who u don't like is being a bully say "Knock it off!" and if sum1 u don't kno is being a bully say "okay rly? just leave" then whenever they try 2 speak 2 tell u off just keep saying "Just Leave" until they do. u can also use this on bullies that u don't like.

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12y ago

A teacher can only help stop bullying if they know it is happening. So many kids think if they tell the teacher then it is snitching - this goes for the kids who are being bullied and the kids who know it is happening. So too many keep quiet and then dont get the help they need.

In the UK bullying is illegal and teachers are duty bound to stop it. How they deal with it depends on each school's anti-bullying policy.

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11y ago
  • Teachers often have their hands tied when coping with students because of laws made where an adult cannot touch or be too verbal against any child. The teacher can report the bully to the Principal and that is about all the teacher can do. It is up to the other students to gather together to form a calm group to protect anyone who is being bullied and the group should be put before the Principal and including parents. Bullying is finally being corralled by police in many States (also Canada) with 'No more bullying.' Laws will be extremely strict in both countries.
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Q: How can you stop students to stop bullying other students?
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