An anonymous letter read at the Northampton County Regular Board meeting describes harassment targeting a student’s appearance and sexuality, highlighting a pattern of inadequate responses that affects schools nationwide
EASTVILLE, Va. — The anonymous letter painted a disturbing picture of harassment and intimidation that ultimately drove a family to abandon public education altogether. Read aloud during a Northampton County Board of Supervisors meeting on July 8, the account detailed how a student “was pressured into lying about her sexuality to avoid further bullying” and endured relentless targeting over “how she dresses, her hair choices, and her looks.”
The letter, delivered to the five-member board by Chairman John Coker, reflects what education experts say is a persistent and often underaddressed crisis affecting schools across the country. Despite decades of anti-bullying legislation and awareness campaigns, nearly one in five students nationwide still reports being bullied during the school year, according to federal data.
The Northampton County case illustrates how bullying incidents, particularly those targeting students’ appearance and sexual identity, continue to slip through institutional cracks even as administrators insist they are addressing the problem. The parent who wrote the letter cited “apparent lack of strong leadership” in the school system and “inconsistent applications of disciplinary policies” before withdrawing their child in favor of homeschooling.
Supervisor Oliver Bennett, a longtime county educator who received the letter, confirmed that 83 students in the county are now homeschooled — a significant number for a district serving approximately 1,300 students total. That translates to roughly 6 percent of the county’s school-age population, well above the national average of about 3-4 percent for homeschooling.
The Northampton County allegations echo findings from researchers who have documented widespread problems with how schools handle bullying reports. If bullied for personal characteristics, students report being bullied most frequently for their appearance (32.7%), followed by race (13%), disability (9.7%), ethnic origin (9.4%), gender (9.2%), sexual orientation (8.9%), and religion (5.8%), according to the National Center for Education Statistics.
The pattern — where a student faced harassment over both appearance and sexuality — represents two of the most common forms of identity-based bullying nationwide. With bias-based bullying, also known as stigma- or identity-based bullying, LGBQ identities (90%) and transgender, gender diverse, and questioning identities (54%) were frequently found among the groups with the highest levels of emotional distress, according to recent research by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Federal data shows that in 2021, high schoolers who are gay, lesbian or bisexual were about twice as likely as their heterosexual counterparts to say they’d been bullied, both at school and online. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 22% of high school students who identify as gay, lesbian or bisexual – and 21% of those who identify as questioning or some other way – said they were bullied on school property. That compares with 10% of heterosexual students.
The letter’s criticism of “inconsistent applications of disciplinary policies” reflects what many education advocates say is a systemic failure to adequately address bullying. When adults respond quickly and consistently to bullying behavior they send the message that it is not acceptable. Research shows this can stop bullying behavior over time, according to StopBullying.gov, a federal initiative.
Yet parents across the country describe experiences similar to those outlined in the Northampton County letter. It has been found that even after reporting bullying incidents the school authorities are often inept in taking effective measures. Any action against the bully, hardly stops the bullying, instead, the bully becomes more conscious and is more careful with his bullying techniques, according to research on school responses to bullying.
The consequences can be severe. Studies have shown that bullying can make children feel isolated, rejected, and excluded by their peers, often leading to an experience of depression, anxiety, and even despair. Academic performance also suffers: Repeated acts of peer aggression have been found to significantly hamper student academic achievement, particularly in the area of mathematics, according to research published in the British Journal of Educational Psychology.
The Homeschooling Alternative
The decision by the Northampton County family to pursue homeschooling reflects a growing trend among parents who feel traditional schools cannot protect their children. Before the COVID pandemic closed schools in early 2020, approximately 3% of school-age children were homeschooled. Since then, the percentage of children being homeschooled has nearly doubled.
Not surprisingly, 80% of parents surveyed in the National Household Education Survey cited concerns about the school environment as one of the biggest reasons to homeschool. For families dealing with bullying, the appeal is clear: homeschooling allows your child to learn in a comfortable, safe environment where parents maintain control over social interactions.
While the Northampton County incident represents one family’s experience, education experts say it illustrates broader institutional challenges. The prevalence of bullying is higher in middle school (26.3%) than in high school (15.7%), and certain groups face disproportionate targeting.
The percentage of teenagers who were bullied was higher among teenagers who were a sexual or gender minority (47.1%) than those who were not (30.0%), according to recent data from the National Health Interview Survey-Teen. Additionally, Teenagers with a developmental disability (44.4%) were more likely be bullied than teenagers without a developmental disability (31.3%).
The letter read in Northampton County mentioned the student was targeted over “how she dresses, her hair choices, and her looks” — forms of appearance-based harassment that research shows can be particularly damaging during adolescence.
Despite some improvements — In 2021-22, about 19 percent of students ages 12-18 reported being bullied during school, which was lower than the percentage who reported this in 2010-11 (28 percent) — bullying remains a significant problem in American schools.
The anonymous letter delivered to Northampton County supervisors serves as a reminder that behind every statistic is a young person whose educational experience has been marred by harassment. For the family that chose to speak out, homeschooling offered an escape from a system they felt had failed their child.
Their story, while specific to our county, reflects challenges that persist in schools nationwide — where policies on paper don’t always translate to safety in practice, and where some families continue to feel that pulling their children from traditional education is their only recourse.
In a written response to the letter, the Northampton County school system stated that it could not address the specific student case. However, the district said that bullying prevention and response, staff qualification, communication, student behavior, and prohibiting vaping are current priorities.
“We want to assure you that we take all concerns, especially those involving student safety and the quality of the learning environment, seriously and are actively addressing them,” the response stated.
The district’s response reflects what education experts say is a common institutional pattern: acknowledging the seriousness of bullying while often struggling to demonstrate concrete improvements that restore families’ confidence in the system’s ability to protect their children.
First off, chances are the first signs of dis function starts at home. It is equally or more so documented that parenting skills over the last several decades has declined to historically low standards. Secondly, if a faculty member disciplines the wrong student or in a manner inconsistent with the newly accepted liberal pansy hands off approach, the problem just manifests itself. One of the small advantages of getting old, is I’m not going to be around much longer to see where this carnival of a generation and Country ends up.