School Mix and Bullying: How Diversity Helps or Fails

Minnesota, USAWed May 27 2026
Studies show that about one in four high‑school students in the U. S. are bullied by classmates. The new research looks specifically at bullying that targets people because of their race, ethnicity, country of origin or religion. It also asks whether a school’s mix of different groups and its location—rural, suburban or urban—change how often this happens. The data come from surveys taken in 2016, 2019 and 2022 by eighth‑ and ninth‑grade students in Minnesota. Researchers used statistical models that account for differences between schools to see how bullying rates linked to school diversity and place. The results were surprising. Rural and suburban schools had the highest overall rates of race‑based bullying, around 24 % and 22 % respectively. Black, Black‑Latine and Hmong students in rural areas reported bullying at rates above 40 %. Religious bullying was most common in both rural (10 %) and urban schools (9. 6 %), and Somali students faced it across all locations, with the highest rates in rural towns.
When schools had a larger mix of different racial and ethnic groups, bullying that targeted race or ethnicity fell for many students—especially those in suburban schools. But this protective effect did not apply to every group; for some, like American Indian/Alaskan Native, Somali and white students, diversity did not lower bullying rates. The study highlights that the experience of being bullied depends on a student’s background, how diverse their school is and where the school sits. It suggests that schools need tailored strategies—policies, teacher training and role‑modeling—to create safer environments for everyone.
https://localnews.ai/article/school-mix-and-bullying-how-diversity-helps-or-fails-127cf1a7

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