Bi Cinealta Procedures for Schools: What Leaders Should Plan is a practical guide for Republic of Ireland primary and post-primary leaders reviewing anti-bullying procedures.
The Bi Cinealta procedures create a clear moment for Irish schools to review how they prevent and address bullying behaviour. The strongest response will connect policy, pupil voice, staff training and visible support routes.
The goal is to help schools move from awareness into clear action: what pupils should know, what staff should do and how leaders can review whether the approach is working.
Why this matters
Anti-bullying, online safety and peer relationship work has the greatest impact when it is joined to pastoral care, safeguarding, pupil voice and everyday classroom routines. A single assembly can raise attention, but pupils and staff need follow-up routes they can actually use.
Key decisions for leaders
Before launching a workshop, policy update or campaign week, it helps to agree a small number of decisions so the work is clear and safe.
- How the school will explain the procedures to pupils and families
- What staff need to recognise cyberbullying, racist bullying, sexist bullying and sexual harassment
- How pupil voice will inform prevention work
- What follow-up support looks like after a concern is raised
Practical activities schools can use
The activities below are designed to make the topic concrete for pupils and staff without turning sensitive experiences into public disclosure.
- Build a short implementation checklist for leadership and pastoral teams
- Run year-group workshops on reporting, bystander behaviour and respect
- Review online behaviour scenarios before updating communications
- Schedule a termly review of concerns, responses and pupil feedback
How to keep the work safe
Schools should make reporting routes visible, protect confidentiality where possible, follow safeguarding procedures and avoid asking pupils to share personal experiences in front of peers. Staff should know what to do if a pupil discloses harm after a session.
What pupils need to hear
Pupils need simple language: what counts as harm, what they can do if they are worried, which adults can help and why silence can leave problems hidden. They also need reassurance that asking for help is not overreacting.
What staff need to practise
Staff need first-response language, recording confidence, scenario practice and clarity about when to involve pastoral, safeguarding or senior leadership colleagues. Training should reduce uncertainty rather than add another task to a busy day.
How leaders can review impact
Useful review questions include whether pupils know where to report concerns, whether staff feel more confident responding, whether repeated locations or groups are appearing in records and whether pupil voice has led to visible change.
How HIP Psychology can support this work
HIP Psychology can support ROI schools with pupil workshops, staff development and anti-bullying implementation planning.
HIP Psychology works with schools across Northern Ireland and Ireland through pupil workshops, staff training, assemblies, reflective supervision and whole-school wellbeing support.
Useful guidance to align with
Schools can connect this work with current guidance and resources, including Bi Cinealta procedures for primary and post-primary schools and Cinealtas: Action Plan on Bullying.
Related HIP Psychology resources
Useful related HIP resources include anti-bullying workshops for schools, anti-bullying programme for schools, bullying prevention workshops, Anti-Bullying Week 2026 schools guide, Anti-Bullying Week activities, cyberbullying in schools, friendship issues in schools, playground friendship support.
Need help planning the next step? Contact HIP Psychology to discuss workshops, staff training or whole-school wellbeing support.
FAQs
What should schools do first with Bi Cinealta procedures schools?
Start by agreeing the purpose, the pupils or staff affected, the safeguarding route and the follow-up process before launching new activities.
How can schools make this practical for staff?
Use realistic scenarios, short scripts, clear recording expectations and a named route for advice when a concern is sensitive or complex.
Should pupils be involved?
Yes. Pupil voice helps schools understand where barriers, silence or unsafe spaces exist, but feedback must be handled safely and acted upon.
How can HIP Psychology help?
HIP Psychology can support schools with pupil workshops, staff training, assemblies, policy review conversations and whole-school wellbeing planning.
