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When you are getting reports of behavioral issues about your child, it is definitely a warning sign of trouble.

When the School Calls: How to Respond if You’re Receiving Reports About Your Child’s Behavior

No parent wants to receive that phone call.

The one where a teacher mentions your child has been teasing classmates, excluding others, being disruptive, or repeatedly getting into trouble socially.

It’s uncomfortable. Emotional. Sometimes even shocking.

But in Part 7 of our 7-part series: “Seven Signs Your Child Might Be Bullying Others—and How to Help,” we’re talking about why those reports matter, and how responding with connection instead of defensiveness can make all the difference.


Don’t Ignore the Warning Signs

If teachers, counselors, coaches, or other adults are consistently noticing concerning social behavior, it’s important not to dismiss it as:

  • “Kids being kids.”
  • Personality clashes
  • Overreactions from others

While no child is perfect, repeated concerns are often signals that your daughter may be struggling socially, emotionally, or relationally.

And the earlier you address those behaviors, the better the outcome can be…for everyone involved.


What School Reports May Be Telling You

Sometimes bullying behaviors stem from:

  • A need for attention or control
  • Insecurity or low self-worth
  • Peer pressure and social dynamics
  • Exposure to unhealthy online behavior
  • Difficulty managing emotions

This doesn’t make your child “bad.”
It means your child may need guidance, support, accountability, and stronger communication tools.


What To Do (With Penelope Pumpernickel’s Courageous Heart 💛)

Penelope Pumpernickel

 

 

 

 

1. Stay calm and listen openly
It’s natural to want to defend your child—but listening first creates space for growth.
Approach the conversation with curiosity instead of shame.

2. Communicate regularly without judgment
Create safe opportunities for honest conversations:

  • “Tell me what happened.”
  • “How are things going socially?”
  • “Do you feel pressure to fit in?”

Children are more likely to open up when they don’t fear immediate punishment.

3. Set clear expectations about kindness and accountability
Your daughter needs to know:

  • Kindness matters
  • Respect is non-negotiable
  • Actions have consequences

At the same time, remind her that mistakes are opportunities to learn and grow.

4. Pay attention to online activity
Social dynamics don’t stop when school ends.
Monitor:

  • Social media use
  • Group chats
  • Phone behavior
  • Online teasing or exclusion

Many bullying behaviors now continue digitally, often away from adult eyes.

5. Get support if needed
If patterns continue, don’t hesitate to involve:

  • School counselors
  • Therapists
  • Mentors
  • Parenting support resources

Asking for help is a strength—not a failure.


Connection Is Still the Goal

When parents respond with only punishment, children often become more defensive or secretive.

But when accountability is paired with connection, something powerful happens:
👉 Kids begin to feel safe enough to reflect
👉 Conversations become more honest
👉 Real change becomes possible

That relationship with your daughter is your greatest influence.


Why This Series Matters

As girls get closer to adolescence, social relationships become increasingly complex, and social media intensifies the pressure.

Our goal as parents isn’t to raise perfect children.
It’s to raise girls who:

  • Understand empathy
  • Take responsibility
  • Know how to treat others with kindness
  • Feel secure enough not to seek power through cruelty

And that work starts early.


Thank You for Joining This 7-Part Series

Over the course of this series, we’ve explored:

  1. Controlling behaviors
  2. Hurtful jokes
  3. Entitlement
  4. (Additional signs in the series)
  5. Blaming others
  6. Lack of empathy
  7. Reports from school

Each topic is designed to help parents recognize subtle warning signs and respond with awareness, connection, and guidance.

Because when we strengthen communication with our daughters early, we help protect them from both participating in—and becoming victims of—the social cruelty that often emerges during adolescence.


Want More Parenting Tools and Support?

At My Crumby World, we’re passionate about helping parents build stronger relationships with their daughters in a world increasingly shaped by social media, comparison, and disconnection.

👉 Follow along for more resources, conversations, and tools designed to help your daughter grow into a kind, confident, emotionally healthy young woman.

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