I am an ex headteacher of a 520 pupil 7-11yr junior school in England and now work as a consultant to an English playground equipment manufacturing company. On a recent fact finding trip to the States I found that the USA was significantly behind the UK in how they dealt with bullying situations.
Many years ago schools in the UK used to say "we don't have a bullying problem here" as they felt that it would mean pupils would leave and funding would drop.They often left kids to slog it out and sort it out for themselves only getting involved when forced to. Over the last 15 years it has been recognised that all schools must address the issue of bullying and create a culture where bullying is not tolerated - by anyone.
The concept of violence being a solution is a false one. Dealing with bullying by bullyiing back only feeds the notion that this is the way to succeed.You create people who will attempt to bully throughout their life as this is the best route to "get your way".
What has to happen is a whole culture change. A recognition that in a society respect is given to everyone, even those who are different.Those who cannot show this respect are not part of society they are isolated.
The company I am a consultant for has created some items of playground equipment that help in reducing bullying and social isolation by creating zones for children and features that appeal to different types of children.I don't want to advertise but please take a look at our temporary website.
www.elementaryplay.com
or ptotoday yellow pages
We have many headteacher clients who are very happy to support the fact that play time is much calmer once this equipment is in place.
Don't despair about the way your schools deal with bullying just get everyone involved in understanding what is aceptable behaviour and what is not. It will take time and may not be much of a relief to those whose children are being bullied at the moment. But in the long run it is worth it.
I won't try to kid you into thinking a couple of bits of equipment are going to change anything but they are a visible feature that shows that the school cares about everyone. That the school is a place where ideal society values are being lived.