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What Is Bullying?  Bullying is a form of aggressive behavior that is intentional, hurtful, (physical and psychological), and/or threatening and persistent.

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Presentation on theme: "What Is Bullying?  Bullying is a form of aggressive behavior that is intentional, hurtful, (physical and psychological), and/or threatening and persistent."— Presentation transcript:

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2 What Is Bullying?  Bullying is a form of aggressive behavior that is intentional, hurtful, (physical and psychological), and/or threatening and persistent (repeated). There is an imbalance of strength (power and dominance).  The above definition includes the following criteria that will help you determine if a student is being bullied:  The mistreatment must be intentional.  The mistreatment must be hurtful (physical or psychological).  The mistreatment is threatening. The individual fears harms. Fear their safety.  The mistreatment must occur more than once. However, some disagree with this. They say one very hurtful event is enough to label it bullying.  There must be a power imbalance

3 What Does Bullying Look Like?  Direct Bullying Behaviors  Physical Bullying (a few examples)  Hitting, slapping, elbowing, shouldering (slamming someone with your shoulder)  Shoving in a hurtful or embarrassing way  Kicking  Taking, stealing, damaging or defacing belongings or other property  Restraining  Pinching  Flushing someone’s head in the toilet  Cramming someone into his or her locker  Attacking with spit wads or food  Verbal Bullying (a few examples)  Name-calling  Insulting remarks and put-downs  Repeated teasing  Racist remarks or other harassment  Threats and intimidation  Whispering behind someone’s back  Indirect Bullying Behaviors

4 What Does Bullying Look Like?  Social/Relational (a few examples)  Destroying and manipulating relationships (turning your best friend against you)  Destroying status within a peer group  Destroying reputations  Humiliation and embarrassment  Intimidation  Gossiping, spreading nasty and malicious rumors and lies about someone  Hurtful graffiti  Excluding someone from a group (social rejection or isolation)  Stealing boyfriends or girlfriends to hurt someone  Negative body language (facial expressions, turning your back to someone)  Threatening gestures, taunting, pestering, insulting remarks and gestures  Glares and dirty looks, nasty jokes, notes passed around, anonymous notes  Hate petitions (promising to hate someone)  Other Bullying Behaviors  Cyber bullying: negative text messages on cell phones, e-mail, or voice-mail messages, Web pages, and so on Direct and indirect forms of bullying often occur together. All of these behaviors can be interrelated.

5 Who Are the Victims of Bullying?  Children who are bullied are often insecure, socially isolated, anxious, and have low self-esteem  They are unlikely to defend themselves or retaliate  They tend to be weaker than their peers  Parents of children who are bullied are often overprotective or enmeshed with their children  Children who are bullied perceive parent or teacher intervention to be ineffective and are unlikely to report the problem

6 Bullying Rational of Adults  Bullying is often perceived as a harmless rite of passage that all children will experience  Unless bullying is likely to lead to physical injury, many adults believe it is best left to be resolved by children and their peers

7 Long-Term Implications of Bullying  Children who are bullies are likely experience legal or criminal problems as adults  Children can carry bullying behaviors into adulthood and experience difficulty in forming and maintaining relationships  Children who are bullied often experience low self- esteem and depression even into adulthood  Children who are bullied perceive school as an unsafe place and are likely to miss more days of school than their peers, as a result their education is negatively affected

8 How Do We Stop Bullying?  Develop a school-wide bullying policy to: raise awareness of teachers and administrators create a framework for responding to bullying improve overall school environment ensure change is occurring in the classroom empower students through programs such as peer counseling, mediation, or conflict resolution

9 How Do We Stop Bullying?  Develop a school-wide bullying policy  Implement classroom curriculum: Develop classroom rules against bullying Develop cooperative learning projects that encourage teamwork and reduce social isolation Create activities or assignments that teach problem-solving or conflict-resolution skills Participate in role-playing or other activities to help children understand the perspectives of others and identify feelings

10 How Do We Stop Bullying?  Develop a school-wide bullying policy  Implement classroom curriculum  Raise awareness of bullying: Allow students to fill out surveys to better understand their perspective of bullying Inform caregivers of bullying policies/curriculum through conferences, newsletters, or PTA meetings Encourage parent involvement in anti-bullying initiatives


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