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Teaching Youth to Stop Name-Calling

Today begins No Name-Calling Week, an awareness week organized by K-12 educators and students to end name-calling and bullying in schools. Name calling may seem benign – it’s just words after all, and our society believes in freedom of speech – but it is a slippery slope. Studies show that name calling actually leads to anger and violence or withdrawal and fear.

Name-calling is actually very common in the United States. We hear parents call their children names when they misbehave. We hear athletes called names when they miss a throw or lose. We hear protesters on opposite sides of an issue call each other names. The media almost glorifies name-calling with popular shows garnering laughs at elaborate cut downs. Even our politicians use name-calling against their opponents. Because our youth live in a culture of name-calling, it’s important that parents, teachers, coaches, and mentors teach students that name calling is wrong and a source of hurt and conflict. Ultimately, calling someone a name is a sign of disrespect.

It is our job to teach youth alternate methods of communication and to model respectful behavior. We must explain how to express anger in a healthy way, how to state their opinion respectfully despite their frustration, how to solve the problem at hand, and how to listen to other’s viewpoints – these are all vital life skills. Avoiding the problem, or thinking a teen will grow out of this “phase,” does not work. In fact, research shows that rude teens mature into rude adults. The way we respond to a teen’s disrespect absolutely influences whether or not it will continue into the teen’s adulthood.

How to Stop Name-Calling

Here are some strategies to stop name-calling:

Final Thoughts…

Keep in mind that adults – parents, teachers, coaches, mentors, etc – are training teens for adulthood. Name-calling is a symptom of disrespect, and disrespect never resolves conflicts. It is our responsibility to help teens learn how to express anger and problem solve in positive ways, even when they are frustrated. Our role is to coach them to find healthy ways to express themselves in difficult situations so that they can be successful in college, marriage, and career.

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