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Bullying Prevention in the PVUSD

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Title: Bullying Prevention in the PVUSD


1
Bullying Prevention in the PVUSD
2
Definition of Bullying
  • Is aggressive behavior that intends to cause harm
    or distress.
  • Usually is repeated over time.
  • Occurs in a relationship where there is an
    imbalance of power or strength.

3
DIRECT Face to Face
Physical Shoves, pushes, hitting, kicking,
assault
Verbal Insults, putdowns, teasing,
harassmentRacial slurs, taunting
Psychological Rolling eyes, dirty looks, mad
dogging, uttering threats, extortion
4
INDIRECT Behind someones back
Relational Aggression Telling people not to be
friends with a victim
Exclusion Leaving out Shunning
Gossip Lowering peoples opinion About the victim
5
The Bullying Circle
Disengaged Onlooker
Follower/Henchman Takes an active part, but does
not start the bullying behavior
Possible Defender Dislikes the bullying and
thinks he ought to help but doesnt
T
Supporter Supports the bullying but does not take
an active part
Defender of the Target Dislikes the bullying and
helps or tries to help the student who was
targeted
Passive Supporter (Possible Bully) Likes the
bullying but does not display open support
6
Myth 1 Students who bully are rejected by their
peers and have no friends
  • Often enjoy high status and have lots of friends.
  • During the middle school years, some students who
    bully are actually quite popular and perceived as
    especially cool.
  • Enjoy a new kind of notoriety. Many classmates
    admire their toughness and may even try to
    imitate them.

7
Myth 2 Students who bully have low self-esteem.
  • Self-esteem movement of the 1980s when many
    people argued that raising self-esteem was the
    key to improving the outcomes of children with
    academic and social problems.
  • Many studies report that students who bully
    perceive themselves in a positive light, perhaps
    sometimes displaying inflated self-views
  • High self-esteem can sometimes encourage students
    who bully to rationalize their antisocial actions.

8
Myth 3 Being a victim builds character
  • Research quite clearly shows that bullying
    experiences increase the vulnerabilities of
    children.
  • Children who are passive and socially withdrawn
    are at heightened risk of getting bullied and
    that these children become even more withdrawn
    after incidents of harassment

9
Myth 4 Many childhood victims of harassment
become violent as teens.
  • Most children who are targets of bullying are
    more likely to suffer in silence than to
    retaliate.
  • Many students who are targeted experience
    psychological adjustment problems like depression
    and low self-esteem, which may make them inclined
    to turn inward rather than outward.

10
Myth 5 There is a victim personality.
  • Certain personality characteristics (e.g., the
    tendency to be shy or withdrawn) place children
    at higher risk for being bullied,
  • Also a host of situational and social factors
    (e.g., being a new student in school, not having
    a friend)
  • These situational factors explain why there are
    more temporary than chronic targets of bullying.

11
Myth 6 Bullying involves only perpetrators and
victims.
  • Bullying incidents are typically public (rather
    than private) events that have witnesses.
  • Playground observations have found that in most
    incidents, at least four other peers were
    present.
  • In more than 50 of the observed incidents of
    bullying, peers reinforced the bullying behavior
    by passively watching.
  • In only about 25 of the incidents did witnesses
    support the target by directly intervening,
    distracting, or discouraging the student who
    bullied.

12
Out-dated Beliefs
  • Bullying is a normal part of growing up.
  • Children who bully will grow out of it.
  • Children are always best left to resolve their
    own conflicts.
  • Childrens conflicts reflect play fighting and
    teasing will do no real harm.
  • Sometimes victims provoke attacks.
  • Adults should not encourage tattling.
  • No way to stop it.

13
Children Who Bully are More Likely To
  • Feel a need to regain power
  • Come from homes where they are bullied or abused
  • Have high self esteem
  • Be popular
  • Get into frequent fights
  • Be injured in a fight
  • Steal, vandalize property
  • Drink alcohol, smoke
  • Be truant, drop out of school
  • Struggle academically
  • Perceive a negative climate at school
  • Carry a weapon

14
Children Who are Targets of Bullying Behavior
  • Often have lower self esteem
  • Tend to feel more depressed, anxious, lonely and
    insecure
  • Have more psychosomatic complaints (stomachaches,
    headaches)
  • Have higher absenteeism rates
  • Often blame themselves and see themselves as
    social failures
  • Tend to view school as less supportive
  • Academic problems include avoidance, truancy and
    greater risk of dropout
  • Have more suicidal ideation
  • Have more peer rejection often blamed by peers
    for being targets

15
Reports of Bullying to School Staff
  • Many do not report being bullied.
  • Older children and boys are less likely to report
    victimization.
  • Why dont children report?
  • 66 of children who were targeted felt that staff
    responded poorly
  • 6 believed that staff responded very well.
    (Hoover et al., 1992)

16
What works in bullying prevention?
  • What is required to reduce bullying in schools is
    nothing less than a change in the school climate
    and change in norms for behavior.
  • This requires a comprehensive, school-wide effort
    involving the entire school community

17
What Can You Do?
  • Students who bully need to learn strategies that
    help them control their anger and their tendency
    to blame other people for their problems.
  • Students who are targets of harassment need
    interventions that help them develop more
    positive self-views and teach them not to blame
    themselves for their experiences with harassment.
  • Peers need to learn that bullying is a whole
    school problem for which everyone is responsible.
    There is no such thing as an innocent bystander.

18
Bullying Problems Requires Systematic,
Systemic SolutionEducate all concerned about
seriousness of problem, across community not
just in school district/schools.
  • Within schools, parents, staff, and students
    learn about their respective roles.
  • Parents learn to talk to children about
    bullying.
  • Teachers are trained to identify and handle
    bullying.
  • Students learn to empathize with students who are
    targets of bullying as well as ways of dealing
    with and responding to students who bully

19
What Works
  • Maintain adequate supervision of children.
  • Make sure the entire school understands that
    bullying, teasing, and harassing will not be
    tolerated.
  • All staff adopt zero tolerance stance and respond
    quickly to early signs of bullying (e.g.
    name-calling).
  • Train and expect teachers, cafeteria workers, bus
    drivers to intervene immediately in both direct
    and indirect bullying situations.
  • Communicate clear policies and consequences to
    staff and students for dealing with bullying.
  • Establish a confidential reporting system that
    allows children to report victimization and that
    records details of bullying incidents

20
What Works
  • Discipline students who bully in a no-nonsense
    style.
  • Phone the parents of both the student who bullied
    and the student who was targeted. If possible,
    involve the parents in designing a plan of
    action.
  • Do NOT blame the victim
  • Students who are targeted may be offered
    counseling and skill building
  • Continue to monitor the behavior of the student
    who bullied and the safety of the target.
  • Consult administrators, teachers, and staff
    members to alert them to the problem and to get a
    better understanding of it.
  • If the situation doesn't change, remove the
    student who bullied not the victim - from the
    classroom.
  • Offer immediate rewards for inclusive behavior.

21
Supporting the Student Who was Targeted
  • Reduce fear by being empathetic and supportive.
  • Reduce self-blame by identifying cruel behavior.
  • Connect the student to helpful peers and provide
    education about social skills.
  • Teach strategies to avoid revictimization.
  • Seek assistance from an adult, friend, or peer
    when a potentially threatening situation arises
    or when other strategies aren't working.
  • Assert Yourself. Make assertive statements to the
    student who bullied, addressing your feelings
    about the his or her behavior.
  • Avoid. Walk away or avoid certain places in
    order to avoid a bullying situation.
  • Self-Talk. Use positive self-talk to maintain
    positive self-esteem.

22
Strategies for Classroom Teachers
  • Provide classroom lessons about bullying behavior
  • Develop a classroom action plan to ensure that
    students know what to do when they observe
    bullying behavior
  • Take immediate action when bullying behavior is
    observed
  • Confront the student who bullied in private
    (challenging in public either gives or takes away
    power)
  • Notify parents of all parties immediately
  • Refer students who are targets and students who
    are aggressors to counseling when appropriate
  • Create a buddy system for students who have been
    targeted

23
Setting up a bully-free classroom
  • Hang anti-bullying posters
  • Talk to your students about bullying (set the
    tone on the first day of class)
  • Make anti-bullying part of one of your lessons
  • Have the students sign an anti-bullying class
    pledge on a banner and hang that banner in the
    classroom
  • Train students on how to deal with bullying (ex
    scenarios)
  • Do activities that promote class unity
  • Have an anonymous notes-to-the-teacher box
  • Do not allow students to pick their own groups
    (for group work)
  • Get students involved in an anti-bullying
    campaign
  • Keep your eyes and ears open at all times!
  • Take every students complaint seriously
  • (Source http//www.bullyfree.com/resources/teach
    ers.php)

24
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25
Moving Silent Bystanders
  • 85 of students are not directly involved
  • These students generally have well developed
    social skills
  • They are often confused about their roles and
    responsibilities in bullying situations
  • May get drawn into bullying behavior because of
    negative peer pressure
  • May experience feelings of guilt and helplessness
  • They do not get involved because
  • They dont know what to do
  • Fear retaliation (snitch rat tattle tale)
  • Fear making the situation worse
  • Worry about losing social status

26
to Caring Bystanders
  • Students need to learn they share the
    responsibility for keeping their school safe and
    caring.
  • Students should be assured that their fears are
    normal and that there is strength in numbers.
  • Students need to have specific methods for
    reporting bullying incidents anonymously or
    privately.

27
How to Intervene to Stop Bullying Tips for
Onthe-Spot InterventionImmediately stop the
bullying
  • Stand between the child or children who bullied
    and those who were bullied, preferably blocking
    eye contact between them.
  • Don't send any students awayespecially
    bystanders.
  • Don't immediately ask about or discuss the reason
    for the bullying or try to sort out the facts.

28
Refer to the bullying behavior and to the
relevant school rules against bullying.
  • Use a matter-of-fact tone of voice to state what
    behaviors you saw/heard.
  • Let students know that bullying is unacceptable
    and against school rules (e.g., Calling someone
    names is bullying and is against our school
    rules, or That was bullying. I won't allow
    students to push or hurt each other that way).

29
Support the child who was targeted in a way that
allows him or her to regain self-control, to
save face, and to feel supported and safe from
retaliation.
  • Make a point to see the child later in private if
    he or she is upset.
  • Don't ask what happened at the time of the
    incident. It can be very uncomfortable to be
    questioned in front of other students.
  • Let his or her teachers know what happened so
    that they may provide additional support and
    protection.
  • Increase supervision to assure that the bullying
    is not repeated and does not escalate.

30
Include bystanders in the conversation and give
them guidance about how they might appropriately
intervene or get help next time.
  • Don't put bystanders on the spot to explain
    publicly what they observed.
  • Use a calm, matter-of-fact, supportive tone of
    voice to let them know that you noticed their
    inaction or that you are pleased with the way
    they tried to helpeven if they weren't
    successful.
  • If they did not act, or if they responded in
    aggressive ways, encourage them to take a more
    active or prosocial role next time (e.g., Maybe
    you weren't sure what to do. Next time, please
    tell the person to stop or get an adult to help
    if you feel you can't work together to handle
    the situation).

31
If appropriate, impose immediate consequences for
students who bully others.
  • Do not require students to apologize or make
    amends during the heat of the moment
  • All consequences should be logical and connected
    to the offense. As a first step, you might take
    away social opportunities (recess, lunch in the
    cafeteria)
  • Let students who bully know that you will be
    watching them and their friends closely to be
    sure that there is no retaliation.
  • Notify colleagues.

32
Do not require the students to meet and work
things out.
  • Unlike conflicts, bullying involves a power
    imbalance, which means this strategy will not
    work. Trying to find a way to work things out
    can retraumatize the student who was bullied and
    does not generally improve relationships between
    the parties.
  • Instead, encourage the student who bullied to
    make amends in a way (after follow-up with an
    adult) that would be meaningful for the child who
    was bullied.

33
Strategies for Students
  • Seek adult help
  • Do not participate in the bullying behavior
  • Offer kind words to the student who was targeted
  • Do not become involved in rumors or gossip
  • If possible, tell the student who is bullying
    that what (s)he is doing is wrong
  • Do not become involved in physical or verbal
    fights with a student who displays bullying
    behavior

34
Cyber Bullying
  • Being cruel to others by sending or posting
    harmful
  • material using technological means
  • an individual or group that uses information and
    communication involving electronic technologies
    to facilitate deliberate and repeated harassment
    or threat to an individual or group.
  • Also known as
  • Electronic Bullying Online Social Cruelty

35
Cyber Bullies Technology
  • E-mail
  • Cell phones
  • Text messages
  • Instant messaging
  • Facebook, My Space
  • Defamatory personal web sites
  • Defamatory online personal polling web sites
  • Chat rooms

36
How Cyberbullying is Different
  • ANONYMOUS
  • Occurs off school property
  • Good relationships with teachers
  • Fear loss of technology privileges
  • Further under the radar than bullying
  • Emotional reactions cannot be determined
  • (McKenna Bargh, 2004 Ybarra Mitchell, 2004)

37
Cyberbully Categories
  • Power-Hungry
  • Want reaction
  • Controlling with fear
  • Vengeful Angel
  • Righting wrongs
  • Protecting themselves
  • Revenge of the Nerds
  • (Subset of Power-Hungry)
  • Often Victims of school-yard bullies
  • Throw cyber-weight around
  • Not school-yard bullies like Power-Hungry Mean
    Girls
  • Inadvertent
  • Role-play
  • Responding
  • May not realize its cyber bullying
  • Mean Girls
  • Bored Entertainment
  • Ego based promote own social status
  • Often do in a group
  • Intimidate on and off line
  • Need others to bully if isolated, stop

38
Cyber Bullying Terms
  • Flaming Online fights using electronic
    messages with angry and vulgar language
  • Harassment Repeatedly sending offensive, rude,
    and insulting messages
  • Cyber stalking Repeatedly sending messages
    that include threats of harm or are highly
    intimidating. Engaging in other on-line
    activities that make a person afraid for his or
    her own safety
  • Denigration Dissing someone online. Sending
    or posting cruel gossip or rumors about a person
    to damage his or her reputation or friendships

39
Cyber Bully Terms
  • Impersonation Pretending to be someone else
    and sending or posting material online that makes
    that person look bad, gets that person in trouble
    or danger, or damages that persons reputation or
    friendships
  • Outing and Trickery Sharing someones secret
    or embarrassing information online. Tricking
    someone into revealing secrets or embarrassing
    information which is then shared online
  • Exclusion Intentionally excluding someone from
    an on-line group, like a buddy list
  • (Nancy Willard, M.S., J.D., Director of the
    Center for Safe and Responsible Internet Use)

40
Legal Issues
  • Educators Guide To Cyber bullying
  • Addressing the Harm of On-line Social Cruelty
  • (Nancy Willard, 2005)
  • Law Enforcement should be contacted if educator
    becomes aware of
  • Death threats or threats of other forms of
    violence to a person or property
  • Excessive intimidation or extortion
  • Threats or intimidation that involve any form of
    bias or discrimination
  • Any evidence of sexual exploitation

41
What Students Needs to Know About Cyber bullying
(Aftab)
  • All actions have consequences
  • Cyber bullying hurts
  • Cyber bully and accomplices often become the
    target of cyber bullying themselves
  • Important to care about others and stand up for
    whats right

42
http//library.thinkquest.org/07aug/00117/ What
You Can Do About Cyberbullying
  • If you are being cyberbullied, you should
    definitely tell an adult. To start with, tell
    your parents. If the bullying is just someone's
    idea of fun, perhaps your parents can put an end
    to it.
  • For people who send you mean e-mail(s), just add
    them to your spam filter, and their messages will
    be deleted automatically.
  • If the student who is bullying has more sinister
    motives, your parents might have to take up the
    matter with the school, the phone or Internet
    service provider, or even the police. They can
    track the student down, and they can stop calls
    and messages from the person from reaching you.
    If necessary, they can close his/her account to
    prevent him/her from troubling you further.
  • If you are depressed by cyberbullying, get away
    from the computer or the phone, and just hang out
    with your friends. You will quickly see how much
    fun you can have in the physical world, without
    computers and mobile phones.
  • Cyberbullying is easy to stop, as long as you are
    willing to take the help of your parents and
    teachers.

43
Cyber Bullying Resources
  • Teenangels.org trains teens preteens to be
    part of solution
  • WiredKids and WiredTeens programs for schools
    and communities
  • Wiredsafety.org one to one hotline and multiple
    resources Videos, Lesson Plans and Activities

44
Bulllying Websites
  • http//www.eyesonbullying.org/toolkit.html
  • http//www.findyouthinfo.gov/topic_bullying_whatCa
    nEducatorsDo.shtml
  • http//www.jaspermiddleschool.org/documents/Bully_
    proofing_your_middle_school.pdf
  • http//www.stopbullyingnow.hrsa.gov/
  • http//www.olweus.org/public/bullying.page
  • http//facs.pppst.com/bullying.html
  • http//www.anonymoustips.com/index.php
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