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School Bullying: Three Levels of Prevention / Intervention

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Title: School Bullying: Three Levels of Prevention / Intervention


1
School BullyingThree Levels ofPrevention /
Intervention
  • Dr. Tommy Turner
  • Dr. Nancy Fox
  • Dr. Jerry Kiser
  • ALCA, November 2006
  • Mobile, Alabama

2
DEFINITION
Bullying - A student is being bullied or
victimized when he/she is exposed repeatedly over
time to negative actions on the part of one or
more students.
3
Bullying - A special type of peer interaction in
which a powerful classmate repeatedly
intimidates, exploits, and/or victimizes a weaker
classmate.
4
Bullying (Three Elements) 1. The bully exhibits
behavior directed toward the victim that is
designed to hurt, harm or damage the victim
physically, emotionally, and/or socially. 2.
This behavior occurs when there is an imbalance
of power/authority between the bully and victim
(physical size, social status). 3. Happens
repeatedly over time.
5
STATISTICS
5-10 of students repeatedly bully peers 81
males / 72 females report being bullied at least
once during their K-12 school years 35-45 of
parents with school aged children reported
feeling fear for their childs safety when the
child is at school
6
WHY PREVENTION / INTERVENTION?
Norway 1982 Three boys commit suicide as a
result of severe bullying by peers ______________
________________________ Professor Dan Olweus
responds to this tragedy by developing /
implementing the Olweus Bullying Prevention
Program in 1983.
7
UNITED STATES
Examples that are similar to what happened in
Norway
8
JAMES KEARBEY (KANSAS, 1985) Age 14 Killed 3
students, Principal Bullied, beaten by the
students for several years. Arrested (Final
disposition unknown)
9
NATHAN FARIS (MISSOURI, 1987) Age 12 Killed the
classmate who teased him about being fat Shot /
Killed himself
10
BARRY LOUKAITIS (WASHINGTON, 1996) Age
14 Killed 2 students, 1 teacher One of the
students killed had teased him Life in prison
(without parole)
11
MICHAEL CARNEAL (KENTUCKY, 1997) Age 14 Killed
3 students, wounded 5 Michael was small and
pudgy, the frequent victim of bullying Life in
prison (without parole)
12
LUKE WOODHAM (MISSISSIPPI, 1997) Age 16 Killed
his mother went to school and killed 2 students,
wounded 7 Victim of bullying, stated he could
not take it anymore. Life in prison I killed
because people like me are mistreated every day -
and nobody does anything. I did this to show
society push us and we will push back.
13
ERIC HARRIS / DYLAN KLEBOLD (COLORADO, 1999) Age
17 / 18 Columbine High School. Killed 12
students, 1 teacher, wounded 23 students Did not
fit in. Influenced by videos / movies Killed
themselves
14
BULLYING FIVE SYSTEMS
1. INDIVIDUAL (STUDENT) Gender Intelligenc
e Temperament / Personality Personal Values
15
2. FAMILY Family Structure Size of
Family Socio-Economic Status Parenting
Style Attitude / Involvement
Regarding Education Attitude /
Involvement In Criminal Behavior
16
3. SCHOOL Building (Old, New) Building
Maintained Size of Classrooms Student
Teacher Ratio Qualified Teaching
Personnel School / Classroom Rules Student
Supervision
17
4. COMMUNITY Urban, Rural Socio-Economic
Status Level of Public Services Level of
Crime
18
5. CULTURE Television Films Music Boo
ks Video Games
19
Profiles
  • Bully
  • Victim
  • Bully as Victim
  • Bystander

20
What is a Bully?
21
Definition
  • Someone who deliberately intimidates, threatens,
    and/or hurts others repetitively over a period of
    time.
  • Verbal, written or physical aggression
  • Physical aggression
  • Rumor spreading
  • Teasing
  • Practical jokes
  • Exhortation

22
The Bully
  • Strong desire to hurt others
  • Exercise an unjust use of power
  • Seize a power imbalance
  • Personally stronger (physically or socially) than
    the victim(s)
  • Assemble a group that is stronger than the victim

23
Types of Bullies
  • Extrovert
  • Outgoing
  • Aggressive
  • Expressive
  • Introvert
  • Hide
  • Control
  • Conform

24
Bully Profile
  • Attention Seeker
  • Usually more popular
  • Less likely to empathize with victim
  • Less likely to understand others points of view

25
Bully Profile
  • Self-important
  • Often comes from a family that uses harsh
    discipline
  • Often have parents that verbally abuse each other
  • Wants revenge and it doesnt matter from whom
    they get revenge
  • Often jealous of others
  • Gender not just boys, girls bully too

26
Bully Profile
  • Enjoys control over others
  • Establishes a power base by testing response of
    less powerful members of group watches how they
    react when small things happen
  • Waits to see if the victim will complain. If the
    victim doesnt complain and the peer group allows
    the behavior, the bullying will continue

27
Victim Profile
  • Passive Victim
  • Provocative Victim

28
Passive Victim
  • Usually weaker and smaller than bullies, more
    helpless
  • Less able to defend themselves
  • May be different and stands out appearance,
    dress, speech, gender, name, ability, etc.
  • Vulnerable
  • May lack social skills
  • May be shy, lonely, or depressed
  • May be anxious and insecure
  • May be characterized as over-protected
  • Often blame themselves and believe the bullying
    is their fault
  • Yields easily to bullying

29
Passive Victim Reactions
  • Fear petrified
  • Depression
  • Zombie-like appearance
  • Wildly-emotional appearance
  • Escapes
  • Seeks help

30
Provocative Victim
  • Usually difficult to recognize
  • Annoy others with teasing
  • irritating behaviors - dont know when enough is
    enough
  • Fight back - but lose in the end
  • May have nasty habits
  • May be fidgety or nervous
  • May be easily aroused emotionally
  • Tend to make others feel they deserve it
  • May be disliked by adults

31
Provocative Victim Reactions
  • Fights back
  • Physically
  • Verbally
  • Acts cool
  • Distracts
  • Amuses or placates the bully

32
Bully Victim Profile
  • Bullied by others
  • Turns the experience around and bullies someone
    weaker than themselves
  • Common Parenting Characteristics
  • Poor parental warmth
  • Abusive and inconsistent discipline and
    monitoring
  • Neglect
  • View mothers a relatively powerless

33
Bystander Profile
  • Outsiders - Ignore the bully
  • Assistants - Support the bully
  • Reinforcers Join in and also bully the victim
  • Defenders - Stick up for the victim
  • Gophers - Get help for the victim

34
What Can Be Done?
  • Three Levels Of Intervention
  • 1- At the school level
  • 2- At the classroom level
  • 3- At the individual level
  • The bully
  • The victim

35
What DOESNT Work
  • Zero Tolerance policies
  • Peer Mediation/Conflict resolution
  • Group Treatment for Bullies
  • Simple, Short-term solutions

36
School Level Intervention/Prevention
  • Conduct a bullying survey (Stan Davis-
    http//www.stopbullyingnow.com)
  • In-Service education about behaviors, responses,
    resources
  • Increased supervision

37
School Level Intervention/Prevention
  • Coordination Group administrator, grade level
    teachers, counselor, psychologist/nurse,
    parent/student representatives
  • Regular meetings with parents and school staff
  • Agenda item at PTO/PTA meetings

38
Classroom Level
  • Enlarged curriculum anger management, conflict
    resolution, communication, cooperation,
    friendship, kindness, diversity
  • Class rules brief clear (Olweus)

39
Classroom (cont.)
  • Rules (cont.)
  • We will not bully other students.
  • We will try to help students who are bullied.
  • We will include students who might be left out.

40
Classroom (cont.)
  • Immediate consequences for aggressive behavior/
    rewards for inclusive behavior
  • Weekly communication with students to clarify and
    reiterate/ to enlist them in prevention
  • Communication with parents

41
Individual Intervention
  • Serious private talks with bully/victim
  • Serious talks with parents
  • Role playing non-aggressive behaviors
  • Role playing assertive behavior

42
Prevention/Intervention Summary
  • Comprehensive system-group-individual
  • Coordinated School Adults, parents, students
  • Clear clear values/moral stand
  • Continuing Not reactionary

43
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