Monday, 20 April 2026

🧠 Special Educational Needs, Disability & Bullying (Training & Awareness Module – Original Rewrite)

 



1. Key Understanding

Children and young people with disabilities or special educational needs are more likely to experience bullying than their peers.

This includes learners with:

  • Learning disabilities
  • Autism and developmental conditions
  • Physical disabilities
  • Sensory impairments
  • Chronic health conditions (e.g. diabetes, epilepsy, allergies)
  • Emotional or behavioural needs

These risks increase due to differences in:

  • Communication
  • Social understanding
  • Physical ability
  • School inclusion and environment

2. Why Bullying Risk Is Higher

Several factors can make students more vulnerable:

🧠 Social understanding differences

Some children may:

  • Struggle to read social cues
  • Misunderstand intent
  • Find it hard to respond to bullying appropriately

🧍 Physical vulnerability

Students may be:

  • Less able to defend themselves
  • Slower to move away from unsafe situations
  • Dependent on support or mobility aids

🏫 Environmental factors

Bullying is more likely when:

  • Staff are unaware or undertrained
  • School culture lacks inclusion
  • Anti-bullying systems are weak or unclear

3. Who Is Most at Risk?

Children with:

  • Autism spectrum conditions
  • ADHD or behavioural needs
  • Learning disabilities (e.g. dyslexia, intellectual disability)
  • Physical disabilities (e.g. cerebral palsy, spina bifida)
  • Chronic medical needs
  • Food allergies or medical conditions

👉 Some children may also be targeted specifically because of their condition or health needs.


4. Types of Bullying Experienced

👄 Verbal bullying

  • Name-calling
  • Mocking differences
  • Threats or insults

🚶 Physical bullying

  • Hitting, pushing, or blocking movement
  • Damaging personal belongings
  • Misusing or interfering with medical equipment

🤝 Social exclusion

  • Being left out deliberately
  • Ignoring or isolating the student
  • Spreading rumours

💻 Online bullying

  • Hurtful messages
  • Public humiliation
  • Exclusion from online groups

5. Special Health Risk Concerns

Some bullying behaviours can become extremely serious, including:

  • Deliberately exposing children to allergens
  • Making threats involving medical conditions
  • Interfering with medication or treatment needs

👉 In these cases, bullying can become dangerous and potentially life-threatening.


6. Signs a Child May Be Being Bullied

Adults should look for:

  • Avoiding school or activities
  • Sudden behaviour changes
  • Anxiety or low mood
  • Injuries or damaged belongings
  • Withdrawal from friends
  • Changes in sleep or eating
  • Fear of certain places or people
  • Increased distress around devices (possible cyberbullying)

7. Impact of Bullying

Bullying can affect:

🧠 Mental health

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Low self-esteem
  • Emotional distress

📚 Education

  • Falling grades
  • Loss of focus
  • School refusal

🧍 Social development

  • Isolation
  • Difficulty forming friendships
  • Long-term confidence issues

8. What Schools Should Do

Schools have a responsibility to:

  • Protect students from discrimination and bullying
  • Ensure safe learning environments
  • Respond quickly to concerns
  • Train staff properly
  • Provide reasonable adjustments
  • Use safeguarding procedures consistently

If bullying is linked to disability, it may fall under disability harassment, requiring stronger action and legal compliance.


9. Responding to Bullying (Best Practice Steps)

Step 1: Listen and support

  • Take concerns seriously
  • Reassure the child
  • Avoid blaming or minimising

Step 2: Record everything

  • Dates
  • Details
  • Witnesses
  • Patterns

Step 3: Report to school

  • Inform safeguarding lead or leadership team
  • Request formal documentation

Step 4: Ensure action is taken

  • Behaviour plans for perpetrators
  • Safety plans for the child
  • Monitoring of ongoing risk

Step 5: Advocate if needed

  • Escalate concerns if unresolved
  • Seek external support if required

10. Prevention Strategies

🏫 School-level actions

  • Clear anti-bullying policies
  • Disability awareness training
  • Inclusive classroom culture
  • Active supervision

👥 Social support

  • Peer mentoring systems
  • Buddy schemes
  • Friendship-building activities

🧑‍🏫 Staff development

Staff should be trained to recognise:

  • Subtle bullying
  • Social isolation
  • Behavioural changes linked to distress

📘 EASY READ VERSION

Bullying and Special Educational Needs

💡 What we know

Children with disabilities or extra needs:

  • May be bullied more often
  • May find speaking up harder
  • May need extra support

⚠️ Why this happens

Some children are bullied because:

  • They learn or communicate differently
  • They look or behave differently
  • They may need extra help

👄 Types of bullying

Bullying can be:

  • Hurtful words
  • Being left out
  • Hitting or pushing
  • Online messages

🧠 How bullying affects people

Bullying can make someone feel:

  • Sad
  • Scared
  • Lonely
  • Worried about school

🛑 What schools should do

Schools should:

  • Keep children safe
  • Stop bullying quickly
  • Teach kindness
  • Include everyone

🤝 What to do if it happens

  • Tell a trusted adult
  • Write it down
  • Ask for help
  • Keep safe

🌟 Important message

Every child deserves:

  • Respect
  • Safety
  • Support
  • Friendship

🧭 PRACTICAL SAFEGUARDING TOOLKIT

👀 Warning signs checklist

  • School refusal
  • Emotional distress
  • Sudden behaviour changes
  • Loss of belongings
  • Fear of peers
  • Social withdrawal

🧑‍🏫 Staff response checklist

  • Listen without judgement
  • Record clearly
  • Report to safeguarding lead
  • Follow policy
  • Monitor ongoing risk
  • Communicate with parents/carers

🧩 Prevention focus

  • Inclusion in all activities
  • Strong reporting systems
  • Disability awareness training
  • Safe classroom culture
  • Peer relationship support

📊 KEY TAKEAWAY

  • Children with special needs are at higher risk of bullying
  • Risk is linked to communication, environment, and vulnerability
  • Bullying can have serious emotional and educational effects
  • Schools must act quickly and appropriately
  • Prevention depends on inclusion, awareness, and safeguarding systems 

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🧠 Special Educational Needs, Disability & Bullying (Training & Awareness Module – Original Rewrite)

  1. Key Understanding Children and young people with disabilities or special educational needs are more likely to experience bullying t...