"Eventually adults did come ... but yeah, just to know that you can't protect your daughter ... 'Mumma bear' comes out."
"She won't leave the house, and even being at home, she still feels unsafe, because these girls ... know where she lives,"Emma explained.
"It's like, do I need to teach our children now to defend themselves before they go to high school, knowing that there's going to be violence?"
"He's been punched in the head, he's had drink bottles thrown at him ... he's been told to go and kill himself, to which he has actually expressed to me that he thinks that's where he would be better off,"she said.
"I know education is important, but I feel like mental health is more important,"she said.
"This is a whole of society problem, that children, in some ways, are acting out what they have seen happen at home or seeing in the media or, in some ways, being encouraged by the world around them,"Ms Hollonds said.
"It totally disrupts your opportunities in life and undermines your ability to pursue further education and career options."
"Absolutely, the school should have in place ways to address the needs of the child who is behaving in those negative ways,"she explained.
"[They also] work directly with young people who are displaying behaviour that would be considered unacceptable, and work with their families around how to engage them in more socially acceptable ways in school,"she said.