Bullying and offensive behaviour
In a (2014/15) survey of Glasgow secondary school pupils 16% reported they had been bullied at school and 8% reported they were bullied online within the last year. These figures suggest that online bullying is not as prevalent as face-to-face bullying yet there is evidence to suggest that both are part of the same problem. It is evidenced that young people use both online and face-to-face communication to bully others, therefore each form of bullying cannot be addressed in isolation.
The survey revealed that more girls (25%) than boys (17%) reported having been bullied in the last year.
Pupils reporting having been bullied in the last year
More boys (20%) than girls (12%) reported that they had bullied or frightened someone else.
Pupils reporting having bullied or frightened someone else in the last year
Those who had been bullied in the last year were asked how they had been bullied. The most common types of bullying were name calling (in 79% of cases of being bullied in person and 71% of cases of being bullied online) and hurtful comment (in 65% of cases of being bullied online and 61% of being bullied in person). Of those who had been bullied in person, one in four (26%) had been physically hurt. One in four (26%) incidents of online bullying involved pictures of the victim.
Source: Glasgow City Schools Health and Wellbeing Survey 2014-2015. Full details of the survey and complete reports can be found here.