What Is Bullying?

Bullying is not just “kids being kids” or a normal rite of passage. According to the Centers for Disease Control and the Department of Education, bullying involves three essential elements: unwanted aggressive behavior, a power imbalance (real or perceived), and repetition or the potential for repetition. This power imbalance is particularly significant, as it creates a dynamic where victims feel unable to defend themselves.

As a child psychologist who has worked with countless families, I’ve seen how this seemingly simple definition has profound implications. The power imbalance might come from physical strength, social status, or even access to embarrassing information—all creating vulnerability in different ways.

The Different Types of Bullying

Physical Bullying

Physical bullying is what many parents first envision when they hear the term “bullying.” It includes hitting, kicking, shoving, spitting, stealing, or damaging property. This form is more common among boys, with research showing that about 6% of male students report being physically bullied compared to 3.7% of female students (PACER Center).

Physical bullying often leaves visible evidence—bruises, torn clothing, broken possessions—making it more likely to be noticed by adults. However, many children hide these signs out of fear or shame. As parents, checking for unexplained injuries or missing belongings can be important warning signs.

Verbal Bullying

Words can wound deeply. Verbal bullying includes name-calling, derogatory labels, mocking, insults, threats, racist comments, and sexual harassment. Over half of adolescents (53.6%) report experiencing verbal bullying at least once in a two-month period (National Institutes of Health).

The particular cruelty of verbal bullying is that it targets a child’s self-esteem and identity at a time when they’re still developing a sense of self. Unlike physical bullying, verbal attacks leave no visible marks but can cause lasting psychological harm.

Social/Relational Bullying

Think of the movie “Mean Girls”—social bullying involves manipulating group dynamics to harm someone’s reputation and relationships. This includes excluding others from groups, spreading rumors, damaging reputations, and encouraging others to reject the victim.

This type is particularly prevalent among girls, with studies showing that 16.6% of females reported being subjects of rumors compared to 9.7% of males, and 4.9% of females reported being purposely excluded from activities compared to 2.6% of males (PACER Center).

As an occupational therapist who works with children struggling with social skills, I often use the metaphor of “social allergies”—some children seem to have heightened reactions to social rejection. For them, exclusion activates the same neural pathways as physical pain, making social bullying particularly harmful to developing adolescents.

Cyberbullying

The digital playground has created new territories for bullying behaviors. Cyberbullying includes sending hurtful messages, posting embarrassing photos, spreading rumors online, creating fake profiles, excluding individuals from online groups, and sharing private information.

Nearly half of U.S. teens (46%) report experiencing cyberbullying, with the most common types being called offensive names (32%), having false rumors spread about them (22%), and receiving unwanted explicit images (17%) (Pew Research Center).

What makes cyberbullying uniquely harmful:

  • It follows children home—there’s no safe haven
  • Bullies can hide behind anonymity
  • Humiliating content can spread rapidly to large audiences
  • Digital content can be nearly impossible to completely remove
  • It often happens outside adult supervision

As a parenting coach, I often tell families that digital access requires digital responsibility. Just as you wouldn’t hand car keys to a child without driving lessons, digital devices require ongoing guidance and oversight.

Identity-Based Bullying

Some of the most damaging bullying targets aspects of a child’s identity. This includes:

  • Racial Bullying: Targeting based on racial or ethnic background
  • Religious Bullying: Mocking religious beliefs, practices, or symbols
  • Sexual Bullying: Unwanted sexual comments, rumors, or pressure
  • Disability Bullying: Excluding or mocking those with disabilities

The statistics are troubling: teenagers with developmental disabilities (44.4%) are significantly more likely to be bullied than those without (31.3%), and LGBTQ+ youth face dramatically higher rates (47.1%) compared to their peers (30.0%) (CDC).

As special educators know, helping children develop pride in their identities can serve as a protective factor against this type of bullying.