Over 12% of students experienced school violence
By Lee Woo-youngPublished : March 15, 2012 - 09:37
51% says bullied verbally; 13% suffer physical bullying, a nationwide poll shows
Over 12 percent of students have experienced school violence during the past year, and verbal assault and group bullying were the most frequent types, a nationwide survey showed.
According to the interim findings from the survey on school violence by the Education Ministry on Wednesday, a total of 171,637 students said they have been victims of school violence during the past year.
Of them, 51.2 percent said bullying involved verbal assault, and 13.3 percent said they have suffered physical group bullying.
The findings are based on the responses of 25 percent of about 5.5 million students across the country from fourth grade of elementary school to high school seniors. The survey was conducted from Jan. 18 to Feb. 20.
The ministry noted that it is not a complete result as more students are expected to send responses by April, when the final result and its analysis will come out.
Students in South Jeolla Province responded the most with 46.3 percent, while those in Seoul showed the lowest response rate with 9.1 percent.
Gangwon was the province with the most frequent school violence reports with 15.1 percent, while Daegu reported the least cases with 9.1 percent.
Daegu is the southeastern city where bully victims committed suicide in December last year, taking the media by storm and triggering a nationwide campaign against school violence.
School violence has occurred most frequently in classrooms (25 percent), followed by restrooms or in hallways (9.6 percent). Over 7 percent said they have been bullied online or through mobile phones.
About 24 percent of the respondents said there are school gangs at their schools or at least know of them.
Middle school students reported the largest number of school gangs with 33.3 percent, followed by elementary school with 23.7 percent and high school with 11.6 percent.
The number of schools where over 100 students answered that their schools have school gangs were 643.
The ministry said they are sharing the survey findings with the police so that they can deal with some of the serious issues immediately.
“So far, we have a total of 106,063 cases shared with the police, and have put 3,138 cases under police investigation or have already been solved with police,” said Oh Seok-hwan, head of the anti-school violence team at the ministry.
After assessing 13,941 more cases, the police will strengthen patrol duty or install more surveillance cameras on streets.
About the relatively low response rate, officials said that the survey itself is of great importance because it can find out problems in every school and deal with them effectively.
By Lee Woo-young
(wylee@heraldcorp.com)
Over 12 percent of students have experienced school violence during the past year, and verbal assault and group bullying were the most frequent types, a nationwide survey showed.
According to the interim findings from the survey on school violence by the Education Ministry on Wednesday, a total of 171,637 students said they have been victims of school violence during the past year.
Of them, 51.2 percent said bullying involved verbal assault, and 13.3 percent said they have suffered physical group bullying.
The findings are based on the responses of 25 percent of about 5.5 million students across the country from fourth grade of elementary school to high school seniors. The survey was conducted from Jan. 18 to Feb. 20.
The ministry noted that it is not a complete result as more students are expected to send responses by April, when the final result and its analysis will come out.
Students in South Jeolla Province responded the most with 46.3 percent, while those in Seoul showed the lowest response rate with 9.1 percent.
Gangwon was the province with the most frequent school violence reports with 15.1 percent, while Daegu reported the least cases with 9.1 percent.
Daegu is the southeastern city where bully victims committed suicide in December last year, taking the media by storm and triggering a nationwide campaign against school violence.
School violence has occurred most frequently in classrooms (25 percent), followed by restrooms or in hallways (9.6 percent). Over 7 percent said they have been bullied online or through mobile phones.
About 24 percent of the respondents said there are school gangs at their schools or at least know of them.
Middle school students reported the largest number of school gangs with 33.3 percent, followed by elementary school with 23.7 percent and high school with 11.6 percent.
The number of schools where over 100 students answered that their schools have school gangs were 643.
The ministry said they are sharing the survey findings with the police so that they can deal with some of the serious issues immediately.
“So far, we have a total of 106,063 cases shared with the police, and have put 3,138 cases under police investigation or have already been solved with police,” said Oh Seok-hwan, head of the anti-school violence team at the ministry.
After assessing 13,941 more cases, the police will strengthen patrol duty or install more surveillance cameras on streets.
About the relatively low response rate, officials said that the survey itself is of great importance because it can find out problems in every school and deal with them effectively.
By Lee Woo-young
(wylee@heraldcorp.com)