ROBYN’S mum Sue Nixon wore a T-shirt bearing her daughter’s photo and the words Bullying Stops Here to the inquest.

She told the Echo after the inquest that her daughter’s break-up with her boyfriend may have been ‘the final straw’ in her daughter’s reasons for suicide.

But she also said “It was 80 per cent down to bullying and the failure of All Saints School to notify us what Robyn had told them.”

Mrs Nixon said her daughter may have been feeling depressed as a result of psychological bullying.

She said: “It was cyber bullying and the isolation she felt from friends caused by emotional and verbal bullying.”

Robyn’s family are concerned that the seriousness of a report from Connexions teenage advice service, which alerted the school to Robyn’s suicidal feelings a month before her death, was not flagged up with them.

Mrs Nixon said during the inquest that she had received a phone call from the school saying that Robyn had asked about ‘life insurance’ but that the details of the report which were ‘much more serious’ were not highlighted.

She added after the inquest: “This should have been taken much more seriously by the senior members of All Saints.

“We don’t want any other family to suffer as we have.”

Close family friend Kate Carter said after the inquest: “Bullying goes on in all schools, not just All Saints.

“But cyber bullying is different, it’s so evil.

“Robyn was being sent texts and notes on Facebook, even when she was on holiday.

“Parents need to monitor what’s going on their kids’ computers.

“We don’t want any other child to feel the way Robyn felt and to feel they have to kill themselves.”

Robyn’s sister Aimeé Chantelle Michél, 24, has set up a Weymouth Beat Bullying Campaign group on the online social networking site Facebook with helpful contacts and advice for parents.