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BULLYING

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Title: BULLYING


1
BULLYING
  • A PRESENTATION OF INFORMATION STRATEGIES
  • Michael Wellins
  • M.S. M.F.T
  • Orange Police Department
  • Crisis Intervention Specialist
  • Frank Boehler
  • Orange Unified School District
  • Director, CWA

2
  • BULLYING
  • This weeks favorite family

3
  • BULLYING

4
  • BULLYING
  • Intolerable
  • BULL ON BULLYING

5
  • BULLYING
  • 24 - 365

6
  • BULLYING
  • Deep

7
  • BULLYING
  • Knows no limits

8
  • BULLYING
  • Consequences

9
  • BULLYING
  • Time or money

10
  • BULLYING
  • Facts

11
  • BULLYING
  • Who, Where Whens

12
  • BULLYING
  • Two wrongs dont make a right!

13
  • BULLYING
  • Take a stand

14
  • BULLYING
  • Face to face

15
  • BULLYING
  • Collaboration

16
  • BULLYING
  • Intensity

17
  • BULLYING
  • Prescriptive

18
  • BULLYING
  • Endurance

19
  • BULLYING
  • Classroom instruction, assignments and homework

20
  • BULLYING
  • The Problem!

21
Bullying Statistics
  • The NEA estimates that 160,000 students miss
    school every day or 28 million missed days per
    year, due to fear of attack or intimidation by a
    bully.
  • One-half of all violence against teenagers occurs
    in school buildings, on school property or on the
    street in the vicinity of the school. Most begins
    as bullying or put-downs.
  • 80 to 90 percent of adolescents report some form
    of victimization from a bully at school.

22
  • Students receive an average of 213 verbal
    put-downs per week, or 30 per day.
  • 90 percent of all students felt that bullying
    caused social, emotional, or academic problems
    for those students who were bullied.
  • 69 percent of all students believe that schools
    respond poorly to bullying and victimization.
  • 10 percent of students who dropout of school does
    so because of repeated bullying.
  • There is adult intervention in 4 of cases and
    peer intervention in 11 of cases.
  • 20 percent of all high school students surveyed
    report avoiding the restrooms out of a fear of
    being bullied.

23
  • Being bullied during middle school is predictive
    of low self-esteem 10 years later. By age 23,
    children who were bullied in middle school were
    more depressed and had lower self-esteem than
    their peers who had not been bullied.
  • By age 23, about 60 of the boys identified as
    bullies in middle school had at least one
    conviction of a crime and 35 to 40 had three or
    more convictions.
  • Being bullied leads to depression and low
    self-esteem, problems that can carry into
    adulthood.
  • Bullies at age 8 are three times more likely to
    be convicted of a crime by age 30.
  • Bullies are less likely to finish college or
    locate a good job.
  • Chronic bullies seem to maintain their behaviors
    into adulthood, negatively influencing their
    ability to develop and maintain positive
    relationships

24
  • Parents are often unaware of the bullying
    problem and talk about it with their children
    only to a limited extent and student surveys
    reveal that a low percentage of students seem to
    believe that adults will help.
  • Bullying usually involves more than the bully
    and the victim 85 of bullying episodes occur
    in the context of a peer group.
  • A survey of bullies in the Midwest found that a
    clear majority of the bullies felt that their
    victims were at least partially responsible for
    bringing the bullying on themselves. The bullies
    also felt that bullying toughened a weak person,
    and some felt that bullying "taught" victims
    appropriate behavior.
  • A bully's triumph over the victim is the reward,
    and a lack of negative consequences may increase
    the likelihood of other children being
    aggressive.

25
  • BULLYING
  • WHAT IS BULLYING?

A spectrum to consider! ?Being Mean
?Bullying ?Assault/Battery ?Murder We
need to draw the line early!
26
What is Bullying?
  • Student bullying is defined as any ongoing
    physical or verbal mistreatment where there is an
    imbalance of power and the victim (target) is
    exposed repeatedly to negative actions on the
    part of one or more other students.
  • The following are some of the common examples of
    bullying
  • Name calling, put-downs, cruel teasing
  • Saying or writing nasty things about them
  • Deliberately excluding them from activities
  • Not talking to them
  • Intimidation
  • Threatening them with bodily harm
  • Taking or damaging their things
  • Hitting or kicking them or
  • Making them do things they dont want to do.

27
Kinds of Bullies
  • There are several kinds of bullies.
  • Proactive bullies need no provocation and are
    naturally more aggressive towards others. This
    group frequently has poor social and relational
    skills and compensates for this lack by picking
    on others.
  • Reactive bullies have often been victimized by
    other bullies who then retaliate by becoming a
    bully.
  • A third group of bullies might be called
    Provocative bullies. These people provoke
    fights or aggressive encounters with others. They
    are quick to become oppositional or defiant and
    cry or display exaggerated responses in conflict
    situations. This group is the most rejected by
    peers and has the fewest friends.
  • Recent studies showed, in several cases, it is
    often difficult for even peers to identify who
    are the bullies and who are the victims because
    the vortex of violence is so prevalent and so
    many participate in it.

28
What is Bullying?
  • Bruce Perry stated this phenomenon in the Vortex
    of Violence (Perry, 1996a).
  • Violence always travels from the strongest to
    the weakest or from the most powerful to the
    least powerful. People who are the object of
    violence absorb it, modify it and then pass it
    on. Young children, who are at the bottom of this
    vortex, often do not have anyone to pass it on to
    so they absorb it, accumulate it and wait until
    they are old enough, big enough, or strong enough
    to erupt in some dramatic way that hurts other
    people.  

29
How does bullying differ from normal peer
conflicts?
  • In a bullying situation, there are 6 defining
    factors
  • Intent to harm. The perpetrator finds pleasure
    in taunting or trying to dominate the victim and
    continues even when the victims distress is
    obvious.
  • Intensity and duration. The bullying continues
    over a long period of time and the degree of
    bullying is damaging to the self-esteem of the
    victim.
  • Power of the bully. The bully has power over the
    victim because of age, strength, size or gender.
  • Vulnerability of the victim. The victim is more
    sensitive to teasing, cannot adequately defend
    him or herself, and has physical or psychological
    qualities that make him or her more prone to
    victimization.
  • Lack of support. The victim feels isolated and
    exposed. Often, the victim is afraid to report
    the bullying for fear of retaliation.
  • Consequences. The damage to the victims
    self-esteem is long lasting and leads the victim
    to markedly withdraw from school or they too
    become aggressive.

30
How does bullying differ from normal peer
conflicts?
  • In a normal peer conflict situation, students
    display the following elements
  • Do not insist on getting their own way.
  • Give reasons why they disagree.
  • Apologize or offer win-win suggestions.
  • Are free to bargain and negotiate to get their
    needs met.
  • Can change the topic and walk away.

31
Factors Contributing to Bullying
  • Family Factors
  • The home is the most violent place in the United
    States.
  • Children from violent homes are three to four
    times more likely to become a bully.
  • There three primary predictive family factors
  • A lack of solid bonding/attachment with the young
    child.
  • Poor supervision and neglect of the childs
    needs.
  • Acceptance and modeling of aggressive or bullying
    behaviors by parents or older siblings.
  • There are very few early identification and
    intervention programs to help children who show
    aggressive tendencies

32
Factors Contributing to Bullying
  • School Factors
  • The amount of adult supervision is directly tied
    to the frequency and severity of bullying in
    schools.
  • A negative school climate where negative behavior
    gets most of the attention encourages the
    formation of cliques and bullying.
  • Some teachers threaten, tease, shame or
    intimidate students to maintain control of their
    classroom.
  • 25 of teachers see nothing wrong with bullying
    and put-downs. Schools condone this behavior and
    do nothing to prevent bullying and put-downs.
  • Schools in poor urban neighborhoods experience
    more violence in and around the schools.
  • Schools located in neighborhoods with high turn
    over also have more bullying.

33
  • BULLYING
  • WEBSITES RESOURCES

www.teasingvictims.com Bullies 2 Buddies
34
  • BULLYING WEBSITES RESOURCES

www.teasingvictims.com Bullies 2 Buddies
Student Lessons How to stop being teased and
bullied without really trying
  • Know why you are teased
  • Change your attitude
  • Three warnings
  • How to handle rumors
  • How to handle physical bullying
  • Getting revenge
  • How to stop people from hating you
  • Have a sense of humor
  • Lose your fears
  • Dealing with brothers and sisters

35
  • BULLYING WEBSITES RESOURCES

www.teasingvictims.com Bullies 2 Buddies
Adults Manual A revolutionary manual for
handling childrens aggression
  • What do we really want for our children?
  • How we teach our children to be hurt by words
  • Our mistaken attitudes towards childrens
    aggression
  • The importance of freedom of speech
  • The Magic Responses, part 1,2, 3 4
  • The mystery of laughter, the best medicine

36
  • BULLYING
  • SPECIFIC
  • STRATEGIES
  • www.teasingvictims.com
  • Bullies to Buddies

37
Strategies for Students!
  • Sit in the front of the bus!
  • Don't hide what is happening from the adults you
    trust. There is nothing wrong with asking for
    help when you are in trouble
  • Mediation
  • If you are being bullied, tell a friend, tell a
    teacher and tell your parents. It won't stop
    unless you do.
  • If you have to walk part of the way, and you're
    afraid of being ambushed, then vary your route,
    try to leave home and school a bit later or a bit
    earlier, or see if you can walk with other people
    who live near you, even if they're older or
    younger.
  • Try to stay in safe areas of the school at break
    and lunchtime where there are plenty of other
    people. Bullies don't like witnesses. 
  • If you are hurt at school, tell the teacher or
    supervisor immediately and ask for it to be
    written down.

38
Strategies for Students!
  • If you have a mobile phone, be careful who you
    give your number to.
  • If you receive threatening phone calls or emails
    then tell your parents and school officials.
  • Being bullied can make you feel very lonely and
    you might think you haven't got any friends. Keep
    your eyes open. If you see someone else on their
    own try to start a conversation, about anything,
    schoolwork, anything at all.
  • If you see anyone else being bullied at your
    school, discreetly tell someone about it (parent,
    teacher, secretary, friend, friends parent).
  • Sooner or later you'll find a genuine friend who
    likes you for yourself.
  • If people are making nasty remarks about you then
    it may be because they are jealous. One way of
    dealing with remarks is simply to say ...yeah,
    whatever, .... each time so that you show them
    that it isn't having the effect of upsetting you
    in the way they think. Try to avoid eye contact
    with them so that they can't see how upset you
    are and you can't see their sneers.

39
Strategies for Students!
  • Keep in mind, if there's a ringleader then it's
    possible that other people who used to be your
    friends probably still like you, but they could
    be worried that if they go around with you
    they'll get bullied in the same way.
  • To have friends you also need to be a friend and
    you can do that by trying to be open and friendly
    with people.
  • Body language tells us a lot about other people.
    If youre trying not to be noticed and looking at
    the ground a lot while darting into school it can
    make you more noticeable. You look defensive and
    vulnerable. If you step out boldly you send out
    a quite different message of confidence, as
    though youre the sort of person who might answer
    back if the bully tries a smart remark. You may
    not be very confident but youll certainly look
    it.
  • Sometimes, when youre very unhappy you might
    want to stay at home to avoid the bullying.
    Every day you go in to school is a triumph over
    the bullies because by being there youre showing
    them that you have every right to be there and
    that their behavior hasnt upset you as theyd
    hoped.

40
Strategies for Students!
  • Avoid going into areas where bullies normally
    congregate. If involved in an activity, do not
    be one of the last to leave. Enter, remain
    around, and exit with other students attending
    the same event.
  • Victims of bullying are often put in positions of
    confrontation and humiliation. You can minimize
    the negative impact of these situations by being
    prepared. Think in advance of possible
    situations. Think of words that you can say to
    minimize and diffuse the situation!
  • Never ever use retaliation as a tool in your tool
    box. Two wrongs will never make a right and you
    may be facing a stiffer consequence than the
    actual bully.
  • Always remember right from wrong and never
    confuse the two!

41
Strategies for Students!
  • REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO
    ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL
    SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE!
    REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO
    ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL
    SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE!
    REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO
    ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL
    SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE!
    REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO
    ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL
    SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE!
    REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO
    ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL
    SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE!
    REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO
    ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL
    SOMEONE! REMEMBER TO ALWAYS TELL SOMEONE!
    IMMEDIATELY!

42
Strategies for Parents!
  • Be Realistic! Bullying goes on in every school.
    It's the way it's dealt with which makes the
    difference between life being tolerable or a
    misery. Bullies are very cunning and are expert
    at getting away with it.
  • Finding out that your child is being bullied is a
    stressful and distressing experience. Its
    natural for a parent to feel anger, confusion and
    guilt. Some children are good at hiding their
    feelings and you may be the last to know that a
    problem exists.
  • Keep your eyes and ears open for coming home
    with cuts and bruises torn clothes asking for
    stolen possessions to be replaced losing
    dinner money falling out with previously good
    friends being moody and bad tempered Being
    quiet and withdrawn wanting to avoid leaving the
    house aggression with brothers and sisters
    doing less well at schoolwork insomnia
    anxiety
  • One of the worst thing to do is to over-react and
    storm into school demanding action. Dont forget
    that if you didnt know your child was being
    bullied then the school may not have realized it
    either.

43
Strategies for Parents!
  • If you think your young child is being bullied,
    but youre not sure, ask a few simple questions
  • Contact you childs teacher and explain your
    worries in a friendly non-confrontational way. 
    Ask how your child is getting on with others in
    class and raise any issues of conflict with other
    children.
  • Ask if the teacher has noticed that your child
    seems unhappy and isolated and is being excluded
    from games in the playground or regularly not
    having a partner to work with in class.
  • Ask the class teacher, or the head of year at
    secondary school, if he/she can keep an eye on
    the situation and let you know if they have any
    concerns. Ask what the teacher suggests would be
    the best way of sorting it out. At a primary
    school perhaps the supervisors could take a more
    active role in the playground by keeping an eye
    on your child and ensuring that people are not
    excluded from games.

44
Strategies for Parents!
  • It might be helpful to try to increase your
    childs circle of friends, by inviting a number
    of children home regularly, to forge stronger
    friendships.
  • If bullying continues Keep a diary of what your
    child says is happening get your child to keep
    his/her own diary write a note to the class
    teacher or head of year, explaining that the
    problem is still unresolved suggest that contact
    between the bully and your child is monitored and
    limited, perhaps by the bully moving to another
    classroom/playground area.
  • If bullying continues, its time to meet, confer
    and provide documentation to the principal
    outlining everything that has gone on, including
    evidence from the diary to back up your
    complaint.
  • If your child has been assaulted at school, home
    or in the community, then make a complaint to
    the police. Remember, many bullies go on to have
    criminal violations later in life. Engaging the
    police may actually prevent further criminal
    activity towards others. Attacks by older pupils
    may result in prosecution, particularly if injury
    is involved.

45
Strategies for Parents!
  • Its wise, when your child is so stressed by
    bullying, and so frightened that they cant face
    school, to telephone the districts Office of
    Child Welfare and Attendance and ask for
    assistance.
  • Transferring your child to another school may
    seem a tempting idea at the time, but think about
    it carefully. You need to consider
  • Can the problem be resolved at the school site?
    Will your child miss his/her friends? What
    impact will your child have adjusting to a new
    school in the middle of a school year? Do the
    bullies also have friends at the new school or
    even worse, what would you do if the bully was
    involuntarily transferred into the new school
    later in the year? Will the travel arrangements
    be more difficult on your family?

46
Strategies for Parents of Bullies!
  • Take the problem seriously.
  • Talk to your child, talk to his or her teachers
    and administrators. Keep in mind that a bully
    will try to deny or minimize his or her
    wrong-doing.
  • Make it clear to your child that you will not
    tolerate this kind of behavior, and discuss with
    your child the negative impact bullying has on
    the victims. Do not accept explanations that "it
    was all in fun."
  • Arrange for an effective, non-violent
    consequence, which is in proportion with the
    severity of your child's actions, and his or her
    age and stage of development. Corporal punishment
    carries the message that "might is right and you
    will be reported to Child Abuse Registry.
  • Increase your supervision of your child's
    activities and whereabouts, and know who they are
    associating with. Spend time with your child, and
    set reasonable rules for their activities and
    curfews.
  • Co-operate with the school in modifying your
    child's aggressive behavior. Frequent
    communication with teachers and/or administrators
    is important to find out how your child is doing
    in changing his or her behavior.

47
Strategies for Parents of Bullies!
  • Praise the efforts your child makes toward
    non-violent and responsible behavior, as well as
    for following home and school rules. Keep
    praising any efforts the child makes.
  • If your child is viewing violent television
    shows, including cartoons, and is playing violent
    video games, this will increase violent and
    aggressive behavior. Change family and child's
    viewing and play patterns to non-violent ones.
  • Make sure that your child is not seeing violence
    between members of his or her family. Modeling of
    aggressive behavior at home can lead to violence
    by the child against others at school and in
    later life.
  • Seek help from a school psychologist, social
    worker, or children's mental health centre in the
    community if you would like support in working
    with your child.
  • Support the efforts of local law enforcement.

48
Strategies for Schools
  • Schools can intervene effectively to reduce
    bullying by developing a safe and supportive
    school climate.
  • Awareness and involvement on the part of adults,
    with regard to bully-victim problems.
  • School survey
  • Programs/conferences devoted to bully/victim
    problems.
  • Effective supervision during recess and lunch
    hour by adults.
  • Consistent and immediate consequences for
    aggressive behavior.
  • Generous praise for pro-social and helpful
    behaviors by students.
  • Specific class rules against bullying.
  • Class meetings about bullying.
  • Serious individual talks with bullies and with
    victims.
  • Serious talks with parents of bullies and
    victims.
  • A meeting of the school parent-teacher
    organization on the topic of bullying.

49
Strategies for Schools
  • Develop a curriculum which promotes
    communication, friendship, and assertive skills.
  • Improve communication among school
    administrators, teachers, parents and students
  • Listen respectfully to bullying concerns raised
    by students, parents, and school staff.
  • Avoid sex-role stereotyping
  • Avoid emphasis on competitiveness at school.
  • Enlist classmates to help alleviate the plight of
    victims and include them in group activities.

50
Specific Strategies for Schools
  • Intervene immediately stop the bullying behavior
    as soon as it occurs.
  • Talk to the bully, and talk to the victim,
    separately. If more than one child is involved in
    perpetrating the bullying, talk to each of the
    perpetrators separately, in quick succession.
  • If a peer mediation program is in place, be very
    careful in referring cases where there is
    bullying, as the power imbalance will likely make
    this a very intimidating situation for the
    victim. The victim's communication and
    assertiveness skills may be very low, and will be
    further eroded by the fear resulting from past
    intimidation and fear of future retaliation. Your
    may wish to exclude such cases from peer
    mediation.
  • Consult with administrator and other teachers, as
    well as staff, to get a wider reading on the
    problem, and to alert them to the problem.
  • Expect that perpetrators will minimize and deny
    their actions and responsibility. Refer to school
    and class codes of conduct in telling the bully
    why their behavior was unacceptable. Tell them
    what behavior you do expect of them. Inform
    bullies of the sanctions which will be imposed,
    that their parents will be involved and police
    contacted.
  • Reassure the victim that all possible steps will
    be taken to prevent a recurrence.
  • Inform the parents of the bully and of the victim
    as soon as possible. A quick call to the home the
    same day is preferable, followed by an
    appointment at school for the parents, if it is
    deemed necessary. Better results are obtained
    when parents are involved early in a bullying
    situation, before behavior patterns are
    entrenched and extremely serious.

51
Specific Strategies for Schools
  • Involve parents in designing a creative plan of
    action, whenever possible.
  • For victims, involving them in groups and
    situations where they can make appropriate
    friends and develop their social skills and
    confidence is important. An example of this is a
    peer support group, new student orientation
    group, a co-operative learning group in class, or
    a special activity group or club. Parents can
    also arrange for these kinds of opportunities
    outside of school. The goals should be to develop
    the child's peer support network, social and
    other skills and confidence. Specific instruction
    in assertiveness skills may also be helpful.
  • For the bullies, specific re-education, as to
    their behavior, is important, in addition to
    sanctions, such as removal of privileges,
    detention, etc. Some schools have had good
    success with in-school detention situations where
    aggressive students must complete social skill
    modules designed to reduce aggressive behavior
    and develop empathy for others.
  • Follow up in communicating with parents and with
    other teachers and administrators about the
    situation, until it is clearly resolved.
  • Monitor the behavior of the bully and the safety
    of the victim on a school-wide basis.
  • If the bullies will not change their behavior,
    despite concerted efforts by school personnel,
    they, and not the victim, should be the ones who
    are removed from the class or school, or
    transferred to another program. Consequences for
    the perpetrators will be of considerable interest
    to all students, and will set the tone for future
    situations. THE ABSENT CHAIR SPEAKS LOUDLY.

52
  • Keep current Bullying Research Bullying
    Literature available for staff, parents
    students

53
  • Discuss the literature
  • and learn from others!

54
  • OUR CHILDREN NEED MORE TOOLS IN THEIR TOOL BOXES!
  • It is our job to see to it that they have what
    they need to be successful!

55
Final Thoughts!
  • A basic law of psychology says
  • What you pay attention to is what you are going
    to get more of. If we focus too much of our
    attention on negative behaviors and not enough on
    positive behaviors, it is easy to see why there
    is so much negative behavior.

56
  • It is time to accentuate the beauty of our
    children inside and out. The focus should be on
    the good, not the bad. Every generation needs
    this lesson!

As Jackie DeShannon said in her 1960s hit song,
What the world needs now is love sweet love,
thats the only thing that theres just too
little of
57
Thank you for attending today!
  • In the event of any questions, contact
  • Mike Wellins, at
  • Orange Police Department
  • (714) 744-7305
  • mwellins_at_cityoforange.org
  • Frank Boehler at
  • Orange Unified School District
  • (714) 628-4060
  • frankb_at_orangeusd.k12.ca.us
  • www.orangeusd.k12.ca.us/cwa/
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