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Documenting Bullying and Conduct Concerns

Clear records protect children and fair process. What teachers should document, how to separate facts from labels, and when to escalate.

"Read this if…" you need to report bullying or serious conduct concerns to leadership, parents, or safeguarding — and you want your record to be clear, fair, and useful.

Documentation is not bureaucracy for its own sake. It is how schools:

  • protect children when memories fade or stories shift
  • show whether harm is repeated
  • respond consistently instead of reactively
  • defend fair process when emotions run high

This article is for teachers and school staff who need practical guidance on what to write down, when, and how.

Document early, not only at crisis point

The best time to start a record is when a pattern first appears — not after a parent emails the principal in capital letters.

Early notes help you:

  • see escalation over weeks
  • separate one-off friction from targeted harm
  • involve leadership with facts instead of vague worry
  • avoid relying on gossip from other learners

If you are still deciding whether conduct counts as bullying, document anyway. Inquiry needs material to work with.

Record facts before interpretations

Strong records distinguish:

Record thisAvoid this
date, time, location"They're always horrible"
who was present"Everyone hates them"
exact words or actions reported or observed"Bullying is obvious"
what the targeted learner said or diddiagnosing motive too early
your response that daycharacter labels ("bad kid")

You can include professional judgement, but anchor it in observable detail.

Example:

  • Weak: "Johnny bullied Thabo again."
  • Stronger: "12 March, break. I saw three Grade 8 boys laughing while one blocked Thabo's path near the tuck shop. Thabo walked away quickly. I spoke to the group; one said it was 'just a joke.' Thabo later said this has happened most days this week."

What to include in each entry

For each incident or disclosure, note:

  • when it happened
  • where it happened
  • who was involved — names if known
  • what was said or done — as specifically as possible
  • witnesses, if any
  • impact described by the learner — fear, humiliation, school refusal, sleep, online spread
  • what you did — spoke to learners, changed seating, contacted parent, referred to counsellor
  • next step agreed or required

If online harm is involved, preserve screenshots or links according to school policy. Do not forward intimate images beyond what safeguarding requires.

Separate interviews and avoid rehearsed group stories

When speaking to learners:

  • interview separately where possible
  • ask open questions
  • note their words rather than only your summary
  • record whether they were told another person would be spoken to

Group interviews often produce loyalty performances, not truth.

Keep records secure and share on need-to-know

Bullying records are sensitive. Follow your school's policy on:

  • where notes are stored
  • who may access them
  • what may be shared with parents
  • when safeguarding must escalate beyond the class teacher

Do not discuss cases in staff rooms in ways that humiliate learners or leak detail to the wrong adults.

Use documentation to support fair consequences

Leadership needs your record to decide proportionate action:

  • supervision changes
  • restorative processes
  • counselling referrals
  • discipline in line with the code of conduct
  • external reporting when statutory thresholds are met

Fair process protects targets and learners accused of harm. Avoid conclusions you cannot support with dated entries.

See Crying Wolf: The Consequences for why false or exaggerated reports damage everyone — and why factual documentation protects credibility.

Partner with parents using documented facts

Parents often arrive with partial information. Your notes help conversations stay grounded.

When contacting families:

  • share what you observed or were told
  • explain next steps
  • avoid debating character on WhatsApp
  • invite them to school when the issue is serious or repeated

Parents may also be trying to work with you — see Working With Schools from their side of the relationship.

When to escalate beyond your class record

Escalate according to policy when:

  • conduct is repeated or worsening
  • a learner is unsafe
  • harm is sexual, racist, homophobic, or disability-related in a serious way
  • online content is spreading widely
  • you suspect abuse beyond peer bullying
  • your interventions are not stopping the pattern

If there is immediate danger, follow emergency and safeguarding procedures first.

A record without follow-up is a diary of failure. After each entry, note:

  • who owns the next action
  • by when
  • what success would look like

Check back with the targeted learner even when they stop mentioning it. Silence can mean relief — or that harm went underground.

Final thought

Documentation is care in written form. It tells a child: what happened to you is on record, and adults are tracking it.

Write early. Write clearly. Write what you saw. Let the pattern speak before the harm becomes irreversible.

Related topics Bullying, Respect, and Accountability Prevention Respectful Conduct Youth