It’s a statistic sure to concern any parent: one in five Australian children aged eight to 15 has experienced cyberbullying.
Just as shocking is the fact that three-quarters of all Australian schools reported cyberbullying last year — with an average of 22 complaints every year in a secondary school.
That’s the equivalent of an entire classroom of bullied students per school.
The stark figures, revealed by online research commissioned by the Abbott government from a consortium led by UNSW’s Social Policy Research Centre, highlight the need for new measures to enhance online safety for children.
Which is just what the Abbott government is aiming to address with its new cyberbullying policy, as Paul Fletcher, parliamentary scretary to the Federal Minister for Communications, told Mamamia.
“The internet is a forum for human behaviour – and just as in the schoolyard most behaviour is positive but some involves bullying, we see similar patterns online,” Mr Fletcher said.
“Cyberbullying can be serious… and its consequences can be more far-reaching than bullying in the schoolyard. If you are bullied online, the humiliation is worse because you know lots of people can be watching online,” he said.
The research showed most cyberbullying takes place on social media — and, as Mr Fletcher points out, the fact social media platforms can be slow to remove hurtful or abusive posts can exacerbate its devastating consequences.
The difficulty of removing bullying content from Twitter, for example, was hotly debated following the suicide of Australian TV personality Charlotte Dawson, who had been heavily trolled on social media.