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Bullying Among Children

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Bullying Among Children & Youth Trinity County Office of Education After School Programs Gloria Halley, Regional Lead Butte County Office of Education – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bullying Among Children


1
Bullying Among Children Youth
  • Trinity County Office of Education After School
    Programs
  • Gloria Halley, Regional Lead Butte County
    Office of Education

2
Overview of the Workshop
  • Participants will
  • Understand what bullying behavior is and is not.
  • Understand what is known about the nature and
    prevalence of bullying.
  • Understand what bullying behavior may look like.
  • Explore ideas for responding to bullying.
  • Learn how schools/after school programs are
    addressing bullying.

3
Video Dont Laugh at Me http//www.youtube.com/w
atch?vE6lH_SPD2gk
4
Bullying
  • Is an aggressive behavior that involves unwanted,
    negative actions that cause harm or distress.
  • Involves a pattern of behavior repeated over
    time.
  • Occurs where there is a real or perceived
    imbalance of power or strength.

5
Four Types of Bullying
6
Verbal Bullying
  • Teasing
  • Name calling
  • Inappropriate sexual comments
  • Taunting
  • Threatening to cause harm

7
Social Bullying (Relational Bullying)
  • Leaving someone out on purpose
  • Telling other children not to be friends with
    someone
  • Spreading rumors about someone
  • Embarrassing someone in public

8
Physical Bullying
  • Hitting, kicking, or punching
  • Spitting
  • Tripping or Pushing
  • Taking or breaking someones things
  • Making mean or rude hand gestures

9
Cyber Bullying
Involves the use of email, social network sites,
cell phones, webcams, text messages, internet
sites http//teachertube.com/viewVideo.php?video
_id249685titleStudents_Take_on_Cyberbullyingre
fNotinourtown
10
How common is bullying?
  • Of students ages 12 through 18 surveyed in the
    200607 school year
  • A total of 31.7 percent report being bullied
  • Of those, 8 percent say they were bullied on the
    bus

11
Longitudinal Study of Children who Bullied
(Olweus, 1993)
  • 60 of boys who were bullies in middle school had
    at least one conviction by age 24.
  • 40 had three or more convictions.
  • Bullies were 4 times as likely as peers to have
    multiple convictions.

12
Gender Differences in Bullying
  • Most studies find that boys bully more than do
    girls
  • Boys report being bullied by boys girls report
    being bullied by boys and girls
  • Boys are more likely than girls to be physically
    bullied by their peers
  • Girls are more likely to be bullied through
    rumor-spreading, sexual comments, social
    exclusion

13
Conditions Surrounding Bullying
  • Children usually are bullied by one child or a
    small group
  • Common locations playground, classroom,
    lunchroom, halls, bathrooms
  • Bullying is more common at school than on the way
    to/from school

14
Effects of Bullying
15
Children Who Bully are More Likely to
  • Get into frequent fights
  • Be injured in a fight
  • Steal and vandalize property
  • Drink alcohol and smoke
  • Be truant, drop out of school
  • Report poorer academic achievement
  • Perceive a negative climate at school
  • Carry a weapon

16
Children who are bullied have
  • Lower self esteem
  • Higher rates of depression and other related
    health problems
  • Higher absenteeism rates
  • More suicidal thoughts

17
Health Consequences of Bullying (Fekkes et al.,
2003)
  • Bullied Not bullied
  • Headache 16 6
  • Sleep problems 42 23
  • Abdominal pain 17 9
  • Feeling tense 20 9
  • Anxiety 28 10
  • Feeling unhappy 23 5
  • Depression scale
  • moderate indication 49 16
  • strong indication 16 2

18
Reporting 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?
  • 2/3 of victims felt that staff responded poorly
  • 6 believed that staff responded very well.
    (Hoover et al., 1992)

19
Kids Who Observe
  • What do you usually do when you see a student
    being bullied?
  • 38 Nothing, because its none of my business
  • 27 I dont do anything, but I think I should
    help
  • 35 I try to help him or her

20
What Are Schools Doing To Address Bullying?
  • Awareness-raising efforts
  • Reporting, tracking
  • Zero tolerance (student exclusion)
  • Social skills training for victims of bullying
  • Individual group treatment for children who
    bully/children who are bullied
  • Mediation, conflict resolution programs
  • Curricular approaches to bullying prevention
  • Comprehensive approaches

21
Common Misdirections in Bullying Prevention and
Intervention
  • Zero tolerance (student exclusion)
  • Conflict Resolution/Peer Mediation
  • Group treatment for children who bully
  • Simple, short-term solutions

22
Change in Perspective
  • From To
  • Bully ? Student who bullies
  • Victim ? Student who
  • was bullied
  • Behavior is a ? Behavior can be
  • permanent characteristic replaced or
    changed

23
What works in bullying prevention?
  • What is required to reduce bullying in schools is
    nothing less than a change in the school climate
    and in norms for behavior.
  • This requires a comprehensive, school-wide effort
    involving the entire school community

24
What DOES Work
  1. Ensure a safe and orderly environment school wide
    including the after school program.
  2. Enforce your schools Student Code of Conduct.
  3. Establish simple guidelines - heres two ideas
    The Five Rs and The Four As

25
What DOES Work
  • The Five Rs
  • Respond Intervene immediately.
  • Research Obtain info from as many sources as
    possible (including bystanders).
  • Record Write accurate documentation.
  • Report File a formal report guided by your
    schools policies.
  • Revisit Follow up with the students involved to
    check how things are going.

26
What DOES Work
  • The Four As
  • Affirm the young persons feelings.
  • Ask questions Who, What, When, Where
  • Assess the childs safety.
  • Act file a report, tell the child what will
    happen next, engage others, follow up.

27
October - National Bullying Prevention Month
Being an Ally Step 1 Get the bullys
attention. Step 2 Keep it calm. Step 3 Call
it out. Step 4 Say how you feel. Step 5 Tell
them what you want. Step 6 Put a price on
it. http//groundspark.org/our-films-and-campaign
s/lets-get-real/lgr_clips http//learning.blogs.
nytimes.com/2012/10/17/in-honor-of-national-bullyi
ng-prevention-month/
28
Resources
  • California After School Resource Center
  • http//californiaafterschool.org/index
  • Groundspark.org Igniting Change Through Film
  • Olweus Bullying Prevention Program Clemson
    University

29
Interactive Website
  • www.stopbullyingnow.hrsa.gov
  • Animated Serial Comic
  • Games, polls for tweens
  • Advice for tweens
  • Resource Kit for adults
  • Links to partner groups and activities

30
Resource Kit
  • More than 20 tip sheets/fact sheets
  • Database of existing bullying prevention
    resources
  • Bullying prevention programs
  • Books, videos, other resources
  • Available on the web (stopbullyingnow.hrsa.gov)
    or in hard copy via HRSA Helpline (1-888-ASK-HRSA)

31
www.StopBullyingNow.hrsa.gov
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