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Secondary education

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If your roommate at a boarding school is a bully...

142 replies

BullyingAtBoardingSchool · 19/05/2019 02:19

DS is 12 and he is a weekly boarder. It was his choice and he was very happy until a boy from China joined the school in January and became his roommate.

DS told me the boy could be quite annoying but he wasn't a bad boy so they were 'OK'. He also said they sometimes clashed but they were working on their differences. He'd never badmouthed him and seemed to be genuinely trying to be on good terms with this boy.

However, when we had a parent meeting in February, literally every single teacher mentioned about the toxic relationship between them, some seemed very concerned or even apologetic. I was a bit surprised but thought they were over-reacting. DS didn't say they got on brilliantly, but he had other friends to play with anyway, so didn't seem to be too concerned about it.

However, near the end of the last term, DS got increasingly unhappy with this boy and requested to change the roommate for the next term. The housemaster previously told us half termly room change could happen when things weren't working well, and we actually saw some changes at a half term before. So asking for a room change for a new term wasn't an unreasonable request. The housemaster knew things were pretty bad between them and hinted his request would be accepted. But just before the school broke for Easter, DS was informed he had to stay with the boy for one more term. The reason for this was the headmaster believed it would be good for DS to gain more patience and resilience. DS was shocked as he expected his request would be approved, but he accepted and followed the instruction.

At the very beginning of this term, things didn't seem bad. DS actually said they were improving. However, this boy's attitude towards DS gradually became nasty and today DS told me he wouldn't cope with the situation any longer. The boy is incredibly selfish, wouldn't allow DS to use shared objects in the room, kicks, and steps on DS's belongings, swears at him day and night, badmouths his parents (us) - this particularly hurt DS, keeps saying mean things with lots of swearing when DS is trying to sleep, and more!! He can't relax when the boy is around. He also fears this boy may do something to his belongings when DS is out of the room, so has to keep going back to the room just to prevent this to happen. It's serious mental bullying to my eyes.

DS doesn't just cry away, so occasionally fights back or try to meet an agreement (most of the times he tries to ignore). But all these things are so draining for him that it's started affecting his ability to focus on study and other extracurricular activities.

I told DS I would email the school to make them act immediately. I would also request the room change after the second half, so only one more week to go, then a week off, then when he's back to school, the boy wouldn't be his roommate anymore. I also told him, if it becomes too much next week, I would come to pick him up and he would stay at home until the school sort this out. He seemed to be very relieved and went to sleep smiling.

This school is so proud of its anti-bullying policy and has a history to punish 'bullies' pretty harshly in the past. However, strangely, this boy doesn't get in any trouble, even though his general attitude is very poor and his bullying towards DS seems to be well known. DS said an older pupil told him that the boy's family is very wealthy and probably gave the school a huge amount of donation, so the headmaster wouldn't want to lose this boy. It's just a silly gossip, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's true... This boy has certainly totally different treatment from others.

I've just finished writing the email to the school. My son was very thankful when I offered to step in. However, am I too naive to expect the school takes our complaint seriously? We aren't wealthy. DS got significant financial help to pay for the fees. I know we aren't particularly attractive to the school financially. I'm worrying I may disappoint DS if I'm unsuccessful to make any significant change after I promised him everything would be fine.

OP posts:
BullyingAtBoardingSchool · 19/05/2019 02:20

Apologies for the long post. I didn't want to drip feed... Sad

OP posts:
Mummoomoocow · 19/05/2019 02:28

I am going to be very unhelpful here and warn you that you are doing your child an emotional disservice by distancing yourself physically from him during his most vulnerable years. Boarding schools are cruel. There are specific therapies designed to undo the damage done to children that attended boarding schools and you should have a serious look at yourself for allowing yourself to remove your child from your care.

emerencealwayshopeful · 19/05/2019 02:39

I hope the school listens to you. But I don't know enough about how things work to be able to reassure you.

I do know that if you aren't able to keep your promise the damage to your relationship is likely to be very difficult to heal.

Given that the school did not change the bedrooms around when this first became an issue I would be seriously questioning how they handle bullying altogether.

Unlike the previous poster I don't believe that it will necessarily damage a child's relationships for them to spend 4/5 nights a week during school terms outside the family home. Non-residential parents can have good relationships with their children. And taking away the daily stresses of getting teens out of bed, to school, through homework etc can reduce strains on a relationship.

aatwi · 19/05/2019 02:40

Weekly boarding isn't the same thing as boarding school, it's not like he's away from his mum long-term -- they have every weekend which is when most people spend the most time with their kids anyway.

I'd keep pushing it with the school and if they won't agree to the roommate switch, say you're pulling him out of the weekly boarding. That might be what is needed for the change to be made.

Tavannach · 19/05/2019 02:41

You have to keep your promise to your DS.
If you don't get a satisfactory response to your email reply quoting the school's anti-bullying policy and insist that they move your son.
I'd be looking at other schools for next September. It doesn't sound like a great environment if they're so easily swayed by wealth.

PerspicaciaTick · 19/05/2019 02:43

This school is so proud of its anti-bullying policy

I'm sure they have a lovely, shiny policy but it isn't worth shit if they don't implement it.

I'd be withdrawing your DS if a room change is not facilitated immediately. The patterns of behaviour he is learning now, to tolerate living in an abusive relationship, will stay with him throughout his life. He doesn't even have sanctuary to escape to at the end of the day.

PerspicaciaTick · 19/05/2019 02:46

I mean, as parents we talk about the damage that bullying via social media does because it invades a child's most private times and safest spaces. And your DS is having to live that everyday, plus the threat of physical threat to himself and his belongings.

Namaste6 · 19/05/2019 02:58

Sorry for your situation OP, but I'm firmly with @Mummoomoocow . I don't get, have never gotten it and will never get it. Do the 100% only decent thing and take your son home.

BullyingAtBoardingSchool · 19/05/2019 03:03

Thank you so much for the prompt replies. I didn't expect that at this late night. Thank you....

I have a list of alternative schools already. I researched and made the list when DS decided to go to this school. Knowing we have a back-up plan made us feel a bit more relaxed about sending him to a boarding school. Today (or actually yesterday already), I reminded him about it so he knows he doesn't need to stick to where he is.

However, he loves his school and he was so so happy until this boy arrived. Ideally, he wouldn't like to change school and actually I feel a bit wrong to remove him from where he wants to be for this boy. I think the school has to do something to improve the situation, rather than expecting DS to get on with it or leave. However, if they don't do anything about it... I wouldn't feel comfortable to let DS stay in their care even though DS would disagree...

The big donation story is just a gossip so we don't know the truth.

OP posts:
Tavannach · 19/05/2019 03:39

I think the school has to do something to improve the situation, rather than expecting DS to get on with it or leave.

I agree. I hope the school sorts it out for you, and then keeps a watchful eye on how the situation develops.

However, he loves his school and he was so so happy until this boy arrived. Ideally, he wouldn't like to change school and actually I feel a bit wrong to remove him from where he wants to be for this boy.

But your DS doesn't love the school atm. He's dreadfully unhappy there. You shouldn't have to even consider moving him because the school should have dealt with the problem efficiently. You wouldn't be moving him because of the boy, but because the school isn't following its own policy of tackling bullying.
I hope it works out well for your DS.

snitzelvoncrumb · 19/05/2019 04:10

Honestly I would go to the school now and tell him to pack his stuff. Tell the person responsible for making the decision that your son IS changing rooms immediately. If they say no take him home.
It's just cruel. If you kick up a huge fuss hopefully they will listen.

anothernotherone · 19/05/2019 04:54

If the school doesn't follow through couldn't he be a day pupil? Or is boarding compulsory at this school?

I weekly boarded through choice - I started as a day pupil but my parents lived in the middle of nowhere far from any of my friends, and I had a pita younger sibling, I wanted to board and hang out with my friends! At age 12 we had a big dorm though, divided into individual cubicles with lots of space at the top to climb over/ sit on so nobody had to share with any one individual and we could all hear each other but had a bit of visual privacy. From the fourth form we shared double rooms but chose our room mates. I think a couple of people had single rooms.

The school should definitely separate them, but if not you have to keep your promise to protect him, but you can do so by bringing him home each night.

happygardening · 19/05/2019 07:54

Contact your housemaster and detail the situation in the way you have here stating exactly what’s going on and ask to have him moved say you don’t want to remove him from the school as he loves it in every other way but will if this continues. If you have no joy take it higher many boarding schools now have a “head of pastoral care” go to him/her if necessary. One of the good things about boarding is that it teaches pupils to live and work along side others we don’t like and get on with as we do in the adult world of work but I don’t believe that two terms of this is fair it’s not going to teach him resilience or patients. I used to work at boarding schools the HMs I worked with thought very carefully about who they put together in rooms less popular children were usually where possible put in larger rooms with 3+ in and matrons and other staff would work with them to try and improve their social skills etc bullying as you detail would not have been tolerated. I can understand that your DS loves his school in every other way but if this issue is not addressed he obviously will not continue to love it.
I’d like to say that the (rumoured) financial situation of this boy isn’t effecting their decisions and that everyone is treated the same but sadly you maybe right! Although a friends DC was put in a similarish situation at her boarding school (they were paying full fees) and despite her mother objecting they continued to do it and this combined with other “niggles” was the final straw and they removed her from the school.

Isthisonealsotaken · 19/05/2019 08:11

Here's what you're going to do..

  1. Carry on giving your son lots of love and praise. Recognise what an extraordinary job he's done. Remind him of role models e.g. Lewis Hamilton etc working with bosses and teams with huge amounts of friction in life threatening conditions. This is genuinely not a wasted experience and your sin is talking to you so you're already winning
  2. The school needs to hear your roar. You're a paying client and if they don't address your complaint with satisfactory action within the fortnight, you will escalate this externally and contact whichever authority and interested parties needed- from school bodies, local authority, mumsnet, Good Schools. You can explain it's not a fight you're looking for but it provides them an opportunity for reflection and its important that there is a level of insight into the schools tolerance levels of bullying. I would certainly like to know your schools name before our kids head that way

If it's some consolation, your son's character is probably considered mature enough to manage this little nightmare or the school wouldn't have paired them. But that's so boring and I see weird social experiments like that in our school too.

Have a good cry in the headmasters office, and email can have a cold and carefully thought thru reply, but a mother at her wits end, in the heads office.. another matter

midsummabreak · 19/05/2019 08:16

Get him out of that school. What a cruel thing to do, force him to stay room mates with a known bully.

midsummabreak · 19/05/2019 08:20

could you not transfer him to a non boarding school, so your son may excell academically and be free to feel loved and wanted when the school day is finished?

BurnedToast · 19/05/2019 08:23

Why are you being so passive about this?

If possible, keep him at home tomorrow and get straight on the phone to the Head. Quite their anti bullying policy at them and give evidence of the bullying which includes information from their staff and tell them your on will not be returning until they resolve this situation. If they say anything a out resilience ask them to explain how putting up with everything you've said builds resilience. All it does it grind someone down and harm them.

Sorry OP, but you really need to step up here.

BurnedToast · 19/05/2019 08:24

And if I hear one more teacher say the word 'resilience' I will scream. Its the current buzz word and should not be used as an excuse for not safeguarding their pupils. Their have a duty of care which they are failing to meet.

DeffoJeffo · 19/05/2019 08:29

Ok. People are WAY overreacting on this thread! I am a house mistress in a boarding school and can 100% say that for the majority of children boarding school is amazing. There are definitely a proportion of children who it doesn't suit but doesn't sound like the OP's son is one of them. OP - yes, definitely speak to the house master again, ideally face to face and if not happy take to the deputy head. They should definitely take your concerns seriously.

squee123 · 19/05/2019 08:38

I expect they're not moving your son because you and your son have tolerated it to date and solved a problem for them. If the troublemaker doesn't share with your son he will have to share with another boy and that boy and his parents might make much more fuss about it. You need to step up and make moving your son the only viable option. Stop being such a pushover.

AppleKatie · 19/05/2019 08:38

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Upsydaisymummy · 19/05/2019 08:56

I think that fact that your paying for this added feature I would expect that the school acts on your complaint.
If it was my child (one they wouldn't be boarders anyway however no judgement) and two remove my child from the school or boarding part. Don't pay for your child to be unhappy.

AlexaShutUp · 19/05/2019 08:57

Yes the OP certainly attracted the anti boarders last night!

Not surprising, really. I think it's pretty incomprehensible to most people in this country that you would choose to send your kids away from their homes and families at such a crucial stage of their development. However, that's by the by, because the OP has chosen for her DS to board, so she needs to find a way of making it work for him.

OP, the current situation sounds intolerable for your DS. I think you need to approach this very calmly but very firmly with the school and tell them that you're concerned about the impact of the current arrangements on your DS's mental health and ask them what they're going to do to address those concerns. I understand what you're saying about not wanting him to have to move when he is the victim of bullying, but ultimately, if the school will not keep him safe, you need to be prepared to remove him from the situation.

AppleKatie · 19/05/2019 09:05

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Tamsyn143 · 19/05/2019 09:11

What happened OP? X