Title: PowerPoint-esitys
1KiVaTM Antibullying Program
Christina Salmivalli and Virpi Pöyhönen University
of Turku, Finland Pre-implementation training
in Wales, May 2012
2Todays topics
- Bullying and the peer group
- KiVa antibullying program
- Overview
- Universal actions
- Indicated actions
- Getting started with KiVa
- Evidence of effectiveness
3Bullying
- Bullying repeated aggressive behavior against a
person who finds it difficult to defend
him/herself against the perpetrator(s) - takes numerous forms
- often verbal abuse, public ridicule
4Bullying
- Rather than consisting of single attacks,
bullying represents a rather stable relationship
further embedded in the larger peer setting - Universal phenomenon about 10 of children and
adolescents worldwide are systematic victims - WHO survey in 2010
- Finland 11/13 victims among the 11-year-old
- Wales 10/10 victims among the 11-year-old
5Finland Being bullied,
Spring 2009, N gt 150 000
6Finland Bullied others,
Spring 2009, N gt 150 000
7Teachers can do much or very much to
decrease bullying, respondents
8Why is bullying such a persistent problem?
- Bullying as proactive, goal-oriented aggression
- What is the function of bullying?
9The social architecture of bullying
- Bullying can be a strategy to gain status and
power in the peer group... - and it is often succesful
- bullies are perceived as popular (Caravita,
DiBlasio, Salmivalli, 2008) - bullying helps to maintain status (Juvonen
Galvan, 2008) - and to increase status over time (Cillessen
Borch, 2004)
10The social architecture of bullying
- By choosing victims who are submissive, insecure
of themselves, physically weak and in a
low-power, rejected position in the group... - ... the bullies can repeatedly demonstrate their
power and renew their high-status position
without being confronted
11The social architecture of bullying
- The power demonstrations need witnesses
- in most bullying incidents, a group of peers is
present
12The social architecture of bullying
- Participant roles in bullying (Salmivalli et al.,
1996)
20
reinforcers of the bully
24
8
bully
outsiders
12
victim
17
assistants of the bully
defenders of the victim
7
12
13The behavior of onlookers does matter
- Individual effects short term
- the defended victims are better adjusted than the
undefended ones (Sainio, Veenstra, Huitsing,
Salmivalli, 2010) - Individual effects long term
- the most negative memory related to bullying is
often no-one cared (Teräsahjo Salmivalli,
2000)
14The behavior of onlookers does matter
- Classroom level
- The likelihood of victimization is higher in
classrooms where reinforcing the bully is
occurring at high levels (Salmivalli, Voeten
Poskiparta, 2011) - Individual-level risk factors, such as anxiety,
are more likely to lead to victimization in
classrooms where reinforcing is common, whereas
high levels of defending minimize the effects of
such risk factors (Kärnä, Voeten, Poskiparta,
Salmivalli, 2010)
15In order to reduce bullying...
- We do not necessarily need to change the victims,
making them less vulnerable - Influencing the behavior of bystanders can reduce
the rewards gained by the bullies and
consequently, their motivation to bully in the
first place - However, the victims need to feel that they are
heard and helped by the adults at school - The bullies need to be confronted for their
unacceptable behavior
16An anti-bullying program should include...
- ...something for all students
? universal actions - ...something for bullies and victims in
particular
? indicated actions
16
17KiVa antibullying program
- School-based program for bullying prevention and
intervention - The meaning of KiVa
- Developed at the University of Turku with funding
from the Finnish Ministry of Education and
Culture - Program co-leaders Professor Christina
Salmivalli and PhD Elisa Poskiparta - In Finland, used by 90 of schools providing
comprehensive education (basic education, grades
1-9)
18Goals of KiVa
- Preventing bullying
- Effective tackling of bullying coming to
attention at school - Minimizing the negative effects of bullying
18
19KiVa program
- Special characteristics
- Both universal and indicated actions
- An exceptionally large amount of materials
concrete tools (not merely a philosophy) - Utilizing virtual learning environments
- Influencing the whole group
- KiVa is more systematic than most existing
anti-bullying programs
20Precondition for implementing KiVa succesfully
School commitment
- Staff meeting
- Information to everyone
- Implementation plan
- People in charge (e.g., KiVa team)
21KiVa antibullying program
- Student lessons
- Computer game
- Parents guide and back-to-school night
- Posters, vests
- Annual surveys
- students
- staff
- Tackling the cases coming to attention
- KiVa team
- classroom teacher
22Universal actions student lessons and computer
game
- Three units, appropriate for different grade
levels/students of different ages Unit 1, Unit
2, Unit 3 - Unit 2 student lessons piloted in Wales
- Ten double lessons (2x45 min) during the school
year - Target age group 9-11 years
23The aims of stundent lessons and computer game
- Enhancing...
- awareness of the role bystanders play in the
bullying process - empathic understanding of the victims plight
- Providing...
- safe strategies to support and defend the
victimized peers ? self-efficacy for defending
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25Teachers manual includes three parts
- Key to the KiVa antibullying program
- Kiva in a nutshell
- Universal actions
- Overview of universal actions
- Student lessons
- Indicated actions
- Tackling acute cases of bullying
26Teachers manual student lessons
27The topics of Unit 2 student lessons
- Grade 4
- 1. Respect is for everybody
- 2. In a group
- 3. Recognize bullying
- 4. Hidden forms of bullying
- 5. Consequences of bullying
- 6. Group involvement in bullying
- 7. Countering bullying as a group
- 8. What to do if I get bullied?
- 9. KiVa School lets do it together!
- 10. How are we doing?
28Class KiVa rules
- At the end of each lesson
- Emphasizes the most important aspect of the lesson
29Activities included in student lessons
30KiVa games and KiVa Street are closely connected
to student lessons
- Repeating testing of what has been learnt
during the lessons I KNOW - Learning to take action I CAN
- Students go around in a virtual school and come
to challenging situations (being bystanders of
bullying) where they have to decide what to say
and do - Motivation I DO
- Students reflect on their own behavior (how they
have done with following the KiVa rules) and get
feedback
31KiVa computer game Unit 2
32A recommended schedule Unit 2
- Month Student lesson Computer game
- August Lesson 1
- September Lesson 2
- October Lesson 3 Level 1
- November Lesson 4
- Dec Lesson 5 Level 2
- Jan Lesson 6
- Feb Lesson 7 Level 3
- Mar Lesson 8 Level 4
- Apr Lesson 9
- May Lesson 10 Level 5
33How to find time for student lessons?
- Example Finland
- Discussion Wales
34Two examples
- Month Student lesson Computer game
- August Lesson 1
- September Lesson 2
- October Lesson 3 Level 1
- (Recognize bullying)
- November Lesson 4
- Dec Lesson 5 Level 2
- Jan Lesson 6
- Feb Lesson 7 Level 3
- (Countering bullying as a group)
- Mar Lesson 8 Level 4
- Apr Lesson 9
- May Lesson 10 Level 5
35Parents involvement
- Information leaflet for parents
(kivaprogram.net/wales?material) - Print and send to each home
- Parents guide (in electronic format)
- Back-to-school night
- presentation graphics available
36To remind about KiVa...
- Posters
- Highly visible vests for recess supervisors (in
Finland, teachers)
37Getting to know the material
- Working in pairs/ small groups
- One student lesson for each group
- Familiarize yourselves briefly with the content
of lesson - Plan a lesson
- Which activities would you include?
- Pick the activity that interests you the most
38Indicated actions tackling the cases of bullying
coming to attention
39KiVa team
- Three or more adults from among the school
personnel, for instance - a principal, a teacher, a school social worker
- 2 X teacher, a special education tacher
- a principal, a teacher, a school nurse
40The role of the KiVa team
- Tackling cases of repeated bullying in
collaboration with the classroom teacher - Documenting bullying cases
- KiVa-team is NOT a solution to all problems at
school !
41Which cases should be directed to KiVa team?
- SCREENING based on the definition of bullying
- Cases not directed to the team (e.g., a conflict
or fight between students) treatment as usual - Cases directed to the team
- A procedure with several steps
42Which cases are directed to the KiVa team?
- Main criteria
- is this offensive/abusive?
- is this repeated, or is there a fear of
repetition? - The form of bullying (whether physical, verbal,
indirect, cyber) is NOT relevant for making the
decision - (pp.124-125 in the teachers manual)
43Finnish evaluation of KiVa (2007-2008)
- SCREENING An average of 9,24 cases/school, range
1-55 (!) - 60.5 of these cases were directed to KiVa team,
an average of 5,6 cases/school - Other cases were typically
- Fight or argument 59
- Misunderstanding 11
- Single aggressive incident 30
44Reports to schools every month most of them in
September-October
- When reported to school personnel
- Frequency Percent Valid Cumulative
- August 15 2.8 3.1 3.1
- September 117 21.9 24.2 27.3
- October 85 15.9 17.6 44.9
- November 4 84 15.7 17.4 62.3
- December 5 27 5.1 5.6 67.9
- January 42 7.9 8.7 76.6
- February 7 30 5.6 6.2 82.8
- March 36 6.7 7.5 90.3
- April 29 5.4 6.0 96.3
- May 18 3.4 3.7 100.0
- Total 483 90.4 100.0
4539,5
60,5
The procedure for tackling the cases of bullying
coming to attention (p. 135 in Teachers manual)
46Case John screening
- The mother of 11-yearl-old John calls the
classroom teacher Two boys from the same class
have been calling John names and pushing him
around, mainly during recess time but also in way
to and from school. Last week the boys had taken
Johns shoes after the PE class he had finally
found them in the trash bin. John told the mother
that this treatment has been going on since the
beginning of school year (2 months) and even
yesterday the boys had been calling him with
nasty names. - The teacher tells that this sounds as systematic
bullying which will be tackled by the schools
KiVa team. During /after the phone call the
teacher fills in the screening form (Form 1).
471. Meeting with John
- One KiVa team member and John
48Important - Support for John!! - Concrete
information of what has happened, when, where, by
whom - Some kids who have not been involved
492. Classroom teacher meets 2-3 classmates
- During/after the meeting with John, the team
member fills in the form 2 and informs the
classroom teacher about the meeting and about the
kids John has mentioned as nice / not involved in
bullying him
50John is having a difficult time I believe
you might be able to support him
513. KiVa team meets the perpetrator(s) of bullying
- Two different approaches
- Confronting
- You have been bullying John and that has to
stop - Nonconfronting
- John seems to be having a hard time at school,
he must be feeling bad
52Confronting and nonconfronting approaches
- Confronting
- E.g., Olweus view about intervening in bullying
- Making it clear that the child has misbehaved
need to change - Nonconfronting
- Pikas The method of shared concern Maines
Robinson No blame approach - Creating a shared concern of the child who has
been bullied blaming the bully/ies not necessary
53Confronting approach (C)
- We know that you have been involved in bullying
John for quite some time. He has been called
nasty names and pushed around, and his belongings
have been taken. This must stop immediately. - GOAL 1 To make it clear that adults know about
the bullying and do not tolerate it. - What are you going to do about this?
- GOAL 2 To make the child committed to changing
his/her behavior - Okay, this sounds good. Well meet again next
week and see how it has been going - GOAL 3 To make it clear that the situation is
being followed
54Nonconfronting approach (NC)
- We are really concerned about your classmate
John who has been bullied. He has been called
nasty names and pushed around, and his belongings
have been taken. He must feel bad dont you
think? - GOAL 1 Shared understanding that John is not
feeling well - Is there anything you could do about it?
- GOAL 2 To make the child suggest some way(s) to
make John feel better - Okay that sounds great. Try that, and well meet
again in a week and hear how it has been going - GOAL 3 To make it clear that the situation is
being followed
55Confronting and nonconfronting approaches
- Common to both
- Discussions are short
- Stick to the point remember the main goals!
56Case John Meeting with the perpetrators of
bullying (confronting)
57Goals, C 1.To make it clear that adults know
about the bullying and do not tolerate it. 2. To
make the child committed to changing his/her
behavior 3. To make it clear that the situation
is being followed
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59Case John Meeting with the perpetrators of
bullying (nonconfronting)
60Goals, NC GOAL 1 Shared understanding that
John is not feeling well 2. To make the child
suggest some way(s) to make John feel better 3.
To make it clear that the situation is being
followed
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62Case John Follow-up with John
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64Case John Follow-up with the perpetrators of
bullying
- In the Finnish evaluation study, the bullied
student participated in the meeting in 30 of the
cases
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66Which approach to choose?
- Confronting or nonconfronting?
- Which one is closer to my previous approach?
- Which one feels better at the moment?
67 The two approaches
- Bullying
- Stopped 74.9
- Decreased 22.3
- Remained the same 2.2
- Increased 0.6
- Bullying
- Stopped 83.5
- Decreased 14.9
- Remained the same 1.5
- Increased 0
IN PRIMARY SCHOOL GRADES, NO DIFFERENCE IN
EFFECTIVENESS
68Comparing the two approaches The proportion of
cases in which bullying had stopped completely
69- Virtual mailbox in the KiVa computer game
- Making reporting more likely
- School must activate the mailbox
- E-mail addresses of KiVa team members
70 Mailbox in the KiVa computer game
71Getting started with KiVa
72Getting started with KiVa
- Registration (until end of May, 2012)
- Staff meeting
- Information for everyone
- Implementation plan
- People in charge (e.g., KiVa team members)
- Student survey (June 2012)
- Kick-off for the students (beginning of school
year in the fall) - Collaboration with parents
- information leaflets (fall 2012)
- back-to-school night (fall 2012)
73Registration
- Go to website kivaprogram.net/wales/registration/
- Fill in the registration form and submit it
- Only one registration per school!!!
- You get an e-mail confirmation of the schools
registration
74Web-based material
- Once registered, each school gets (in the
confirmation e-mail) school username and staff
password - In addition, each school gets a student password
for the student survey computer game
75Annual survey
- To be filled in during June 2012 (and again in
June 2013) - www.kivaprogram.net/wales/
- On the left surveys
- Students log in with the school username and
student password - All students in the school can respond
- Bullying others and being bullied
bullying-related attitudes school liking
perception of teachers - Automatic feedback to each school
76Other web-based material
- kivaprogram.net/wales/
- open and restricted areas
- access to the restricted area only for registered
schools (click the login button) - You need school username and staff password to
log in
77Restricted area in the website
- Presentation graphics for...
- student lessons
- staff meeting
- back-to-school night
- All materials
- student lessons
- short films
- information leaflet for parents
- parents guide (in electronic format)
- Forms to document bullying cases
78Staff meeting
- To be remembered
- A common definition of bullying
- KiVa program
- Choosing the KiVa team
- Screening directing cases to the KiVa team
- Collaboration with parents
- kick-off for students
79KICK-OFF
- All students are informed about KiVa right in the
beginning of the school year - Main message Our school is a KiVa school where
bullying is not tolerated - Lessons for grade X students
- KiVa team
80Informing the parents
- Information leaflets (kivaprogram.net/wales/)?
material - Send to each home in the beginning of the school
year - Parents guide (electronic format)
- Back-to-school night
- Presentation graphics www.kivaprogram.net/wales
- Home-school collaboration
- Results from the schools student survey
81Evidence of effectiveness
82Evaluation of KiVa
- The effects of KiVa have been tested
- under the evaluation period (gt 30 000 students
from 234 schools) - Bullying, being bullied
- Self- and peer-reports, dyadic data
- Participant role behaviors
- Attitudes,empathy, self-efficacy
- School adjustment
- under large-scale diffusion (gt 150 000 students)
- Basic variables, e.g. bullying, being bullied
83Changes in being bullied by different forms
during one school year RCT, grades 4 to 6
84Changes 2009-2012 primary schools
85Changes 2009-2012 secondary schools
86Conclusion
- KiVa is effective in reducing bullying and
victimization - The effects vary across grade levels, being
strongest in grade four (10-11 years)
87Besides the effects on bullying and
victimization...
- Decreases in reinforcing the bully
- Increases in empathy toward victimized peers
self-efficacy to support them - Increases in school liking and academic
motivation - Decreases in depression, anxiety, and negative
peer perceptions - Among teachers, increased efficacy to reduce
bullying
88Comparison of two approcahes to tackle bullying
- No Blame vs. Confronting approach
- During the evaluation study of KiVa, half of the
intervention schools were instructed to use C
while the other half got instructions to use NC
when discussing with the bully(-ies)
89Effectiveness of the indicated actions
- The proportion of cases handled by the school
team in which bullying... - Stopped completely 79.4
- Decreased 18.5
- Remained the same 1.9
- Increased 0.3
IN PRIMARY SCHOOL GRADES, NO DIFFERENCE IN
EFFECTIVENESS
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