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Bullying Prevention

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Title: Bullying Prevention


1
  • Bullying Prevention
  • What We know
  • and
  • What We Can Do.
  • Karina Kidd
  • Integrated Student Support Department
  • Portland Public School District

2
Goal for Today
  • To familiarize participants with the components
    of comprehensive bullying prevention

3
Violence
  • Violence is any mean word, look, sign, or act
    that hurts a persons body, feelings, or things.
  • No one is entitled to use violence.
  • Violence is not tolerated at our school.

4
Bullying Prevention
Designing School-Wide Systems for Student Success
Bullying Prevention
1-5
1-5
Bullying Prevention
5-10
5-10
80-90
80-90
5
Training Goals
  • Provide participants with knowledge and skills
    to
  • Recognize bullying
  • 2. Support children who are
  • involved in bullying situations
  • 3. Intervene safely and effectively in
  • bullying situations
  • Provide participants with the understanding
    that bullying prevention is part of a
    comprehensive school-wide effort to create a safe
    and civil school.

6
Think About.
  • A bullying situation that you have experienced
  • Partner share
  • What are the effects of bullying?

One minute
7
Effects on Person who is Bullied
  • Students who are chronically bullied are more
    likely to have
  • A greater dislike of school
  • Higher absenteeism
  • A decline in school performance
  • Poor self-esteem
  • Greater incidence of psychological disorders such
    as depression and anxiety
  • Repeated bullying may also trigger serious
    episodes of violence

8
Where to Start?!!!
9
Bullying Definition
  • Bullying is unfair and one-sided. It happens
    when someone keeps hurting, frightening,
    threatening or leaving someone out on purpose.

10
Key Elements of Bullying
  • Imbalance of power
  • Intent to cause harm deliberate, non-accidental
  • Acts are repeated show a pattern
  • Vulnerability of victim

11
Direct Bullying
  • Hitting, kicking, shoving, spitting
  • Taunting, teasing, racial slurs, verbal
    harassment
  • Threatening, obscene gestures

12
Indirect Bullying
  • Getting another person to bully someone for you
  • Spreading rumors, gossip
  • Deliberately excluding someone from a group or
    activity
  • Many forms of Cyberbullying

13
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14
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15
Challenges for Schools
  • Although common and frequent, most bullying and
    harassment behaviors are exhibited outside of
    adult supervision.

16
Scope of the Problem
  • Bullying happens once every 7 minutes.
  • The average bullying episode lasts 37 seconds.
  • Teachers noticed and intervened in only 1 out of
    25 episodes (4 of the time)
  • Bullying commonly increases between the third and
    seventh grades.
  • (Committee for Children, 2005)

17
I Feel Safe at School
  • 6th grade- 15 said NO
  • 8th grade- 15 said NO
  • 11th grade- 19 said NO
  • Oregon Wellness Survey (2010)

18
  • Harassed on the way to, at or from school-
  • 35 of 8th graders
  • 23 of 11th grader
  • I Can talk freely and openly with my teachers
    about my concerns-
  • 30 of 6th graders say, NO
  • 44 of 8th graders say, NO
  • 47 of 11th graders say, NO

19
Where Does Bullying Occur?
  • The most common places where bullying takes
    place
  • School yard or playground (74 of victims)
  • Hallways (53 of victims)
  • Cafeteria (45 of victims)
  • At home or on computer (cyberbullying)
  • But it could be different for your school.

What does your data say?!!
20
Why Some Children Bully Others
  • 1. If a behavior works, it is repeated
  • 2. Students dont know how else to influence
    peers
  • 3. They dont realize that their behavior is
    inappropriate- poor modeling (Jack in the Box)
  • 4. Errors in thinking
  • 5. Bullying meets a need. Rewards for bullying
    behaviors
  • Social attention
  • Social recognition
  • Social status

21
PPS Harassment and Bullying Policy 4.30.060-P
  • Harassment and bullying is prohibited.
  • Definition includes physical, emotional and
    social harm.
  • Disciplinary action, up to and including
    expulsion, for harassment/bullying, false
    accusations and retaliation.
  • Witnesses and bystanders (including students,
    staff or volunteers) to a bullying incident are
    encouraged to immediately inform school staff.

22
PPS Administrative Directive4.30.061-AD
  • Notice in buildings
  • School-Wide Staff Training
  • School-Wide Student Notification
  • Respect for Cultural Differences
  • Electronic Forms of Harassment
  • Incidents should be promptly investigated.

23
  • Portland Public Schools prohibits harassment and
    bullying on or near school grounds, going to or
    from school, at any school activity, or on school
    buses or other school transportation.
  • What is considered harassment and bullying?
  • Threatening
  • Insulting
  • Making fun of someone
  • Intentionally excluding a certain student or
    group of students
  • Damaging a students property
  • Hurting a students body
  • Causing a student to fear being hurt or
    embarrassed
  • Causing a student to fear having his/her
    property damaged
  • Trying to make others afraid at school

24
School Factors
  • Negative disciplinary interventions
  • Inadequate supervision of bully-prone areas
  • Inconsistent educator response to bullying
    behaviors
  • Physical features of the school
  • Adult unawareness or denial of problems

25
Myths About Bullying
  • Bullying really isnt a big problem.
  • Children who bully have low self-esteem.
  • Only boys bully.
  • If a kid just fights back or ignores the
    bullying, the problem will be solved.
  • Adults feel that they are already doing
    everything they can to address bullying.

26
Misdirections..
  • Zero tolerance policies
  • Conflict resolution and peer mediation
  • Group treatment for children who bully
  • Simple, short-term solutions
  • (piece meal)

27
Three Levels of Bullying Prevention
  • Small Group target at-risk students or tough
    kids who need more intensive intervention
    (Tertiary Prevention)
  • Classroom or Grade-Wide select individual
    classrooms or grade levels (Secondary Prevention)
  • School-Wide all students in a school (Primary
    Prevention)

28
School Wide Bullying Prevention
  • Create a school climate based on mutual respect
  • Make bullying prevention part on the work of the
    climate team
  • Establish clear rules/procedures/ policies about
    bullying.
  • Be Respectful applies to students
  • and adults in the building!

29
Comprehensive Bullying Prevention
  • Physical considerations- e.g playground?
  • Increase effective supervision
  • Teach specific skills to all students
  • Train adults to respond sensitively
    consistently to bullying.
  • Enforcing consistent consequences for bullying
  • Improve parental awareness involvement in
    working on the problem.

30
Directly Teaching Skills
  • Steps to Respect (Committee for Children)
  • Middle School Second Step (Committee for
    Children)
  • Bully Blockers (Tough Kid Series, Pacific
    Northwest Publishing)
  • PBIS Bullying Prevention

31
www.pbis.org
32
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33
Dynamics of Bullying
Bystanders
Students with bullying behaviors
Students who are targeted
34
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35
The Three Rs of Bullying
Recognize
If you dont feel safe
If you do feel safe
Refuse
then
Report
36
Tattling Vs. Reporting
  • Tattling When you try to get someone in trouble
  • Reporting When you tell an adult in order to
    keep people safe

37
  • Identifying Bullying Behaviors

Recognize, Refuse Report
38
  • Skill Steps

39
Children Learn to Report Immediately When
  • They or someone else are in danger
  • Someone is touching or showing private body parts
  • Refusing doesnt work

40
Bystander Role
  • Students learn that everyone is responsible for
    helping create a respectful school community
  • Bystanders can be part of the solution or the
    problem
  • Failure to act, intervene or report, supports the
    student who is bullying

41
Bystanders
  • Need effective strategies to intervene
  • Must be included in intervention
  • Social pressure of the peer-group is an important
    key to reduce bullying -Social Norms
  • Must feel confident that they will have the
    support of teachers

42
Handling Bullying Reports
  • Four -A Response
  • Affirm
  • Ask
  • Assess
  • Act

43
Video Four-A Response Process
  • Watch him Affirm, Ask, Assess and Act

44
Teaching Social Responsibility
  • Teach school-wide expectations first
  • Be respectful
  • Be responsible
  • Be safe
  • Focus on non-structured settings
  • Cafeteria, Gym, Playground, Hallway, Bus Area
  • Use same teaching format for all situations
  • If someone directs problem behavior toward you.
  • If you see others receive problem behavior
  • If someone tells you to stop

45
Strategies For Young Students
  • Stop
  • Walk
  • Talk (or Squawk)

46
Teach the Stop Signal
  • If someone is directing problem behavior to you,
    or someone else, tell them to stop.
  • How do you deliver the stop signal if you are
    feeling intimidated, harassed, bullied?
  • How do you deliver the stop signal if you see
    someone else being harassed, teased, bullied?

47
Teach walk away
  • How do we walk away so that the person who is
    bothering us gets the idea?
  • Remind students that most socially initiated
    problem behavior is maintained by peer attention.
  • Victim behavior inadvertently maintains taunt,
    tease, intimidate, harassment behavior.

48
When You Are Told Stop
  • Eventually, every student will be told to stop.
    When this happens, they should do the following
    things
  • Stop what they are doing
  • Take a deep breath
  • Go about their day (no big deal)
  • These steps should be followed even when they
    dont agree with the stop

49
Teach getting help
  • Report problems to adults
  • Where is the line between tattling, and
    reporting?
  • Did you request, stop
  • Did you walk away?

50
How Adults Respond
  • Adults initiate the following interaction with
    the person who did the bullying
  • Did ______ tell you to stop?"
  • If yes "How did you respond?" Follow with step 2
  • If no Practice the 3 step response.
  • Did ______ walk away?"
  • If yes "How did you respond?" Follow with step 3
  • If no Practice the 3 step response.

Practice the 3 step response. The
amount of practice depends on the severity and
frequency of problem behavior
51
Clear Expectations and Consequences for Bullying
  • Should be preplanned
  • Clearly explained to students
  • Intervene promptly
  • Coaching or Specific Skills instruction
  • Hierarchy of consequences
  • Reprimands or warnings
  • Loss of privileges
  • Think Time
  • Call to parent

52
Important Considerations
  • Confidential Reporting
  • Power of the students
  • (Safe School Ambassadors)
  • http//www.community-matters.org/safe-school-a
    mbassadors/
  • Replicating playground programs
  • Are we differentiating unkind behavior from
    bullying behavior?
  • ???

53
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54
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55
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56
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57
Wrapping It Up
  • Bullying is a serious problem that can be
    addressed at school.
  • Students can be directly taught bullying
    prevention skills
  • Friendship skills and a caring climate play an
    important role in preventing bullying.
  • Establishing school-wide expectations and
    consistent response and follow-up is important

58
Take Away!
  • Bullying prevention is part of a comprehensive,
    ongoing school-wide and community effort to
    create a positive and safe school climate.

59
Additional Resources
  • http//www.stopbullyingnow.org
  • http//www.community-matters.org/safe-school-ambas
    sadors/

60
Thank you!
61
  • Portland Public Schools Student Services
    Department
  • Karina Kidd
  • kkidd_at_pps.k12.or.us
  • Integrated Student
    Supports Department
  • BESC
  • 501 N Dixon
  • Portland Oregon 97227
  • (503) 916-2000 x71014
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