Anti-Bullying Rapid Review

The Anti-Bullying Rapid Review (the Review) was announced on 16 February 2025. The purpose of the Review was to examine what is working to prevent and respond to bullying in Australian schools and what needs strengthening, before reporting to Education Ministers. Consultation commenced in February and concluded at the end of August 2025.

Final report

The Final Report from the Anti-Bullying Rapid Review has been released, with all Education Ministers asking for an implementation plan to be brought to them to consider actions that can be taken to implement the recommendations.

Review recommendations

The Final Report from the Anti-Bullying Rapid Review includes eight recommendations that aim to ensure that every school is a safe, inclusive and respectful learning environment where bullying and other harmful behaviours are not accepted.

National Standard on addressing Bullying in Australian Schools

The National Standard is intended to provide a best practice framework for schools to build into the process and policies they already have established in the school. The National Standard will give teachers, parents, young people and children confidence that, no matter where a student goes to school, bullying will be appropriately addressed and the school workforce supported to take appropriate action.

This is not a one-size-fits-all response to bullying, it recognises the need for a comprehensive whole of school approach that is appropriately tailored to local context and diverse student cohorts. The National Standard will support and build on anti-bullying policies and guidance already in place.

Review co-chairs

Dr Charlotte Keating and Professor Jo Robinson AM are the co-chairs of the Review.

Photo of Dr Charlotte Keating smiling and wearing a navy blazer, a white shirt, dark framed glasses, long straight blonde hair with her arms crossed.
Photo of Prof Jo Robinson wearing a pale blue blazer and white shirt, with shoulder length straight blonde hair.

Why an Anti-Bullying Rapid Review?

Bullying and cyber bullying have significant detrimental impacts on student mental health and wellbeing. Bullying undermines student wellbeing, attendance, engagement and learning outcomes. It also contributes to lifelong impacts such as reduced community participation, poor social-economic outcomes, and increases in ill-mental and physical health. 

Bullying is not something that happens just in schools, but schools are places where we can identify instances of bullying, intervene, and provide support to children and young people. Bullying is a complex social issue that requires action at multiple levels: within schools at the leader, educator and student levels; within families and communities; and across all levels of government and non-government school organisations.

Anti-Bullying Rapid Review consultation

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115 consultations across Australia, 1706 Submissions, 72 Online, 38 In-person, 5 hybrid, reference group, research

 

Expert co-chairs, Dr Charlotte Keating and Professor Jo Robinson AM led the Review to determine what is working and what needs strengthening in responses to bullying and its underlying causes in schools.

The Review report, recommendations and the National Standard have been informed by an extensive consultation process and research into existing practices as part of the Review.  

A Reference Group was established to support the review. The Reference Group provided advice to the review co-chairs on current education systems and policy issues, including school-based anti-bullying strategies, policies and procedures to help identify warning signs, the interventions required, and the support provided to students and parents.  

The Review conducted 115 stakeholder consultations with over 610 attendees. The co-chairs travelled to all capital cities and some regional locations for the face to face consultation process.  

They met with parents, teachers, school leaders and young people to ensure their lived experience was a primary consideration of the Review. This included a broad cross section of stakeholder groups, including stakeholders representing regional and remote communities, First Nations, LGBTQIA+ and students with disability.

Online written submissions were also sought with over 1,700 submissions received from young people, parents and carers, and teachers, as well as key stakeholders in the education sector. The submissions provided rich and valuable insights into anti-bullying practices and policies in Australian schools.

Submissions

Submissions will be published on this webpage soon. All personal information will be redacted prior to publication.

While individuals and organisations may have indicated a preference for their submission to be published (whether attributed by name, pseudonym, or anonymously), the department retains full discretion over the final decision to publish. 

Review Terms of Reference

The Terms of Reference define the purpose, scope, and the conduct of the Review.