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Feature: Bullying: We're not willing to be victims

5 mins read Education
With Anti-Bullying Week set to take place from 17-21 November, Chloe Stothart asks pupils from Bar Hill Community Primary School in Cambridge how bullying has affected them and discovers what action their school is taking to stamp it out

SOLOMON MORLEY, 11

"I was bullied a couple of years ago. They called me names and it made me feel upset. My friends cheered me up. I told the anti-bullying council which my school has set up. You fill in a slip and you get invited to the meeting. Now the council has changed things. Friendly Friday, where children with nobody to play with could approach one of the children from the anti-bullying council in the playground to find a playmate, is now Find a Friend every day of the week. The Citizenship Group has also been created. This is where a group of children mentor others who are having difficulty making friends. It is great to help people.

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