
How You Can Help End Teen Dating Violence
Awareness and action will end teen dating violence. Here are a few ways you can create safer world for teens:
- Promote Bystander Intervention: If you see something, say something! It’s crucial to teach teens how to safely intervene when they witness abusive behavior. This could involve checking in with the potential victim, offering support, or, if safe to do so, directly addressing the abuser. Even seemingly small acts of intervention can disrupt the cycle of abuse and send a powerful message that such behavior is unacceptable.
- Challenge Harmful Norms: Many abusive behaviors stem from harmful ideas about gender roles and dangerous misconception that jealousy equals love. By questioning and challenging these norms, we can foster healthier relationship dynamics built on respect and equality.
- Strengthen Support Systems: No one should face dating violence alone. We need robust support systems for survivors, including more counselors in schools, better-funded support programs within communities, and a culture of support, not judgment. Let’s create environments where survivors feel safe and empowered to seek help.
- Encourage Healthy Coping and Self-Care: Teaching teens healthy ways to manage stress, anger, and relationship challenges is vital. Encourage activities like journaling, mindfulness, exercise, and creative expression as healthy outlets for emotions. These skills are essential for building resilience and fostering emotional well-being.
- Advocate for Policy Changes: To create lasting change, we need policies that protect teens and provide the necessary resources. Advocate for changes that support survivors and prevent future violence. This could involve pushing for improved education programs in schools, increased funding for support services, and stronger laws against abusers. Contact your local representatives, attend town halls, engage with your school board, and make your voice heard.
Supporting Teens in Healthy Relationships
- Educate Yourself: Learn about the dynamics of healthy relationships and the different forms of abuse. Use resources like the “Understanding Healthy and Unhealthy Relationships” worksheet available at iRespect&Protect.com.
- Talk to Someone You Trust: If you’re experiencing TDV, confide in a trusted friend, family member, counselor, teacher, or other adult. You are not alone.
- Know Your Resources: There are organizations dedicated to helping teens in abusive relationships.
- Model Healthy Relationships: Adults can make a huge difference by modeling healthy relationships and having open, ongoing conversations with teens. Use media as a teaching tool, pointing out healthy and unhealthy behaviors in movies and TV shows.
- Establish Boundaries: Help teens understand their own boundaries and the importance of respecting others’ boundaries. Talk about consent in all contexts.
- Talk About Behaviors, Not People: When discussing concerns, focus on the specific behaviors that are troubling, rather than labeling or blaming individuals.
- Listen and Express Concern: Create a safe space for teens to talk and express their feelings. Let them know you’re there for them and that they’re not alone.
Easy Ways to Get Involved:
Ready to take action? Here are some concrete steps you can take:
- Organize or Attend Events: Partner with local schools or community centers to host workshops, panel discussions, or even informal lunch-and-learn sessions about healthy relationships and TDV prevention. If you’re not ready to organize, simply showing up and being present can make a difference. Talk to your school about the iRespect &Protect myWorth curriculum.
- Engage on Social Media: Social media is a powerful tool for raising awareness. Share stories, statistics, and resources about teen dating violence. Join online campaigns, use relevant hashtags like #TDVAM2025 and #RespectThat, and connect with others who share your passion for this cause. Every post, tweet, and share can amplify the message and reach a wider audience.
- Engage in Open Conversations: Talking about dating violence can be challenging, but it’s essential. Start open, judgment-free conversations with friends, family, and classmates. Awareness begins with honest dialogue. Don’t shy away from those potentially awkward conversations; they can be life-changing.
- Share Resources: You never know who might be silently searching for help. Share the resources listed below on social media and directly with friends who might need them. You could be the lifeline someone desperately needs.
Key Resources:
Understanding healthy relationships:
- Love Is Respect: Offers information, quizzes, and a relationship spectrum guide. https://www.loveisrespect.org/
- One Love Foundation: Features educational videos and tools to identify healthy vs. unhealthy behaviors. https://www.joinonelove.org/
- Trevor Project: Resources for healthy LGBTQ+ relationships. https://www.thetrevorproject.org/
- 15 Qualities of Healthy Relationships 15 Important Qualities of a Healthy Relationship
Recognizing abuse:
- Dating Violence: Understanding Signs and Seeking Help Dating Violence: Understanding Signs and Seeking Help
- Know the Warning Signs of Abuse to Protect Yourself and Others 19 Warning Signs of Abuse You Should Never Ignore
- LGBTQIA+ Relationships and Dating Violence LGBTQIA+ relationships and dating violence – love is respect
- National Domestic Violence Hotline ⏐ Identify Abuse: Guidance on spotting warning signs in a relationship. https://www.thehotline.org/identify-abuse/
- RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network): Facts on emotional, physical, and sexual abuse, plus confidential support. https://www.rainn.org/
Getting help:
- How to Document Abuse and Prove Domestic Violence
- Love Is Respect Hotline
- Call: 1-866-331-9474
- Text: Text “LOVEIS” to 22522
- Online Chat: Available on the website
- Anti-Violence Project: LGBTQ+ Crisis Support and Safety Planning
- Crisis Text Line
- Text “HOME” to 741741 for 24/7 support
- The National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) – Offers confidential support and resources.
- The National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-800-656-HOPE – Connects you with trained counselors for support and resources.
- National Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: 988 or chat online.
- Planned Parenthood ⏐ Relationships: Guidance on talking to a trusted adult and finding local services.
- iRespect&Protect.com: Provides resources and training for parents and teens, including a “Understanding Healthy and Unhealthy Relationships” worksheet and the myWorth Program. myWorth is a FREE supplemental health curriculum designed for 6th-grade students. This program assists youth in navigating the complexities and pressures of growing up in the digital age. Through four 45-minute sessions, myWorth engages students in meaningful discussions and activities about self-worth, resilience, authenticity, peer pressure, online safety, social media, and identifying safe adults and friends.
- myWorth empowers students to make healthy choices while reinforcing the concept that their worth is constant, timeless, and separate from our decisions. Additionally, myWorth addresses the critical issue of sexting, educating youth about its risks and promoting responsible digital behavior.
References
- American Psychological Association. (n.d.). Up to 19% of teens experience dating violence. Psychologists want to break the cycle. Monitor on Psychology. Retrieved from https://www.apa.org/monitor/2023/07/psychologists-preventing-teen-suicide
- Break the Cycle. (n.d.). Teen DV Month. Retrieved from https://www.breakthecycle.org/teenDVmonth/
- Break the Cycle. (n.d.). Teen Dating Violence Statistics. Retrieved from https://www.breakthecycle.org/teen-dating-violence-statistics/
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2006, May 19). Physical dating violence among high school students—United States, 2003 (Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Vol. 55, No. 19). Department of Health and Human Services.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2024, August 6). Youth risk behavior survey data summary & trends report: 2013–2023. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/yrbs/dstr/index.html
- Fifth & Pacific Companies, Inc. (formerly Liz Claiborne Inc.), & Family Violence Prevention Fund. (2009). *Troubled economy linked to high levels of teen dating violence & abuse