35
BULLYING 411

Bullying 411

  • Upload
    dotty

  • View
    48

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Bullying 411. What is Bullying?. What do you think?. What do you know about bullying? What do you want to learn about bullying?. Bullying Definition…. Repeatedly causing someone to feel stressed, humiliated or threatened in an effort to exert power or control over that person. . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Bullying 411

BULLYING 411

Page 2: Bullying 411

WHAT IS BULLYING?

Page 3: Bullying 411

WHAT DO YOU THINK? What do you know about bullying?

What do you want to learn about bullying?

Page 4: Bullying 411

BULLYING DEFINITION… Repeatedly causing someone to feel stressed, humiliated or threatened in an effort to exert power or control over that person.

Page 5: Bullying 411

TYPES OF BULLYING…5 categories of Bullying Physical Bullying Verbal Bullying Relational Bullying (emotional/social) Cyber Bullying Sexual Bullying

Page 6: Bullying 411

PHYSICAL BULLYING Repeated acts of physical aggression

toward a person in order to assert power – hitting, pushing, spitting etc.

Page 7: Bullying 411

VERBAL BULLYING Repeated acts of verbal aggression

toward a person in order to assert power or control- name calling, teasing or demeaning.

Page 8: Bullying 411

RELATIONAL BULLYING Repeated acts of aggression in which

someone attempts to manipulate or damage a peer by sabotaging their friendships in order to assert power or control - spreading rumors, hurtful gossip.

Page 9: Bullying 411

CYBER BULLYING Using the Internet or other technologies

to communicate words, images, language in an effort to purposely cause distress to another. – Facebook, You Tube, texts.

Page 10: Bullying 411

SEXUAL BULLYING Any unwanted sexual advances or

actions intended to make the other person uncomfortable, embarrassed or humiliated.

It may include obscenities, gestures, exposure or physical contact.

Page 11: Bullying 411

WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE?Conflict A disagreement

between two or more persons of equal power

Bullying Repeatedly causing

someone to feel stressed, humiliated or threatened in an effort to assert power or control over that person.

Page 12: Bullying 411

Conflict Bullying

Equal Power- The students in the conflict are equals or equally matched

Imbalance of Power- (big/small, older/younger, popular/unpopular, many vs. one)

Can happen on one occasion Happens regularly

Both parties are emotional Strong emotional reaction from the victim

Problems resolve and parties may be friends again

Parties involved are NOT friends

Starts as an accident- not purposeful

Purposeful targeting of one person by another person or group

Parties aren’t afraid of each other Target/Victim feels in danger in some way

Page 13: Bullying 411

CRITERIA OF BULLYING Three criteria for an incident to be

considered bullying:1. Any behavior that is unwanted, offensive,

threatening, insulting, causes discomfort or humiliation, or interferes with the student’s school performance which results in the victim feeling stressed, injured or threatened.

2. The behaviors are repeated.3. There is an imbalance of power between

the bully and the victim.

Page 14: Bullying 411

THINK ABOUT IT… Decide if the following scenarios meet

all three criteria to be considered bullying, or if it is a conflict which should be worked out.

If the scenario is an example of bullying identify the type of bullying being detected.

Page 15: Bullying 411

BULLYING OR CONFLICT? Every time Tyreek passes Isiah he bumps him and says,

“Watch where you’re going, fresh meat!” All of Tyreek’s friends laugh. Isiah starts to skip school to avoid Tyreek.

Mariah is mad because Stacey got lead in the school play. Mariah bad mouthed Stacey to their mutual friends until no one talks to Stacey at all. This has been going on for a week. Stacey is upset because no one will talk to her.

Sally thinks Gina stole her boyfriend. She confronts Gina in PE. Gina starts taking off all her jewelry and tells Sally, “ Bring it on, if you think you can.”

Toby sends Jennifer e-mails calling her horrible names and threatens to tell everyone at school that Courtney eats dog food because her family is so poor. He makes Courtney cry every day.

Page 16: Bullying 411

DEALING WITH BULLYING

Page 17: Bullying 411

HOW SHOULD WE RESPOND TO BULLYING?

Page 18: Bullying 411

GET THINKING! Think about a time when you witnessed

bullying and did nothing to stop it because you weren’t sure what to do.

What feelings did you have as a bystander?

Page 19: Bullying 411

WHO HAS THE POWER? Who has the most power in a bullying

situation: the bully, the victim, or the person watching what is going on?

Why do you think so?

Page 20: Bullying 411

YOU ARE CORRECT! The person watching.

Page 21: Bullying 411

BYSTANDER Someone who observers a bullying

event.

Page 22: Bullying 411

TYPES OF BYSTANDER Sidekick – A bystander who actively joins in at

the bully’s invitation. Usually is a friend of the bully.

Reinforcer- A bystander who does not actively participate in the bullying but laughs or encourages the bully in some way (smiling, hanging around, comments, gestures).

Onlooker- A bystander who does not support the bully but does nothing when others are bullied. This student does not want to get involved and may feel that bullying is none of his/her business.

Defender- A bystander who tries to stop bulling while maintaining personal safety. May comfort the victim and get adult help if necessary.

Page 23: Bullying 411

A LITTLE FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Most students are ONLOOKERS! They do not support the bullying, but

they don’t get involved in helping the victim either.

Why do you think students are reluctant to get involved?

Page 24: Bullying 411

WHY STUDENTS DON’T GET INVOLVED? They don’t know what to do or how to

stop it. They are afraid that if they try

something they may do something wrong and make the situation worse.

They fear that if they intervene they may be next on the bully’s list for bullying.

They think their friends may reject them if they reach out to someone who is an “outsider.”

Page 25: Bullying 411

HOW CAN A BYSTANDER HELP?Say what you feel. Tell the bully that you don’t like what

they are doing.Tell a trusted adult. Report Bullying. When it isn’t safe to

intervene alone, get help.Ask other friends to help. If it is beyond what you can do

alone, ask friends to join you in helping the target. Having people close by can discourage bullying.

Never leave the targeted person alone. It shows support and bullies are less likely to pick on someone if they are with others.

Don’t encourage the bully. This means no laughing or smiling.

Understand that you can make a difference.Put yourself in the victim’s shoes. Treat others like you

would like to be treated.

Page 26: Bullying 411

DON’T BE A TARGET FOR BULLYING! There is no way of telling who a bully is

by how he/she looks. Bullies come in all shapes and disguises. Bullies bully in all different ways. Bullies all have one thing in common:

they want to be powerful and in control.

If you are being bullied, there are things you can do to help keep you safe and help you steer out of the bully’s way. The following tips will help:

Page 27: Bullying 411

HOW TO AVOID BEING A TARGET: Stay with a group of friends Be friendly to others Join clubs or group activities Find things you do well Tell an adult you trust Learn friendship-making skills Walk with your head high and your

shoulders back Avoid areas that are unsupervised

Page 28: Bullying 411

REMEMBER… Kids who bully love to have power, and

they use it to purposely to intimidate, hurt or harass others.

They especially love it when their target gets upset, angry, scared or sad.

That reaction makes them feel even more powerful. So don’t give it to them!

Page 29: Bullying 411

REPORT BULLYING! Any student, parent or other interested

party can report bullying.

Bullying can be reported anonymously.

Page 30: Bullying 411

REPORTING VS. SNITCHINGSnitching When a person

tell something minor to an authority figure in hopes that it will get someone in trouble.

Reporting When a person

shares important information with an authority figure in order to prevent someone from being in danger or hurt.

Page 31: Bullying 411

WAYS TO REPORT BULLYING: Call the school and report via phone. Go to the school and talk to personnel in

person.

Page 32: Bullying 411

MORE WAYS… Fill out a reporting form and turn it into

the Main office or the guidance office. Drop a reporting form in your school’s

bully box.

Page 33: Bullying 411

REPORTING 411 When reporting bullying, make sure you

have all of the facts: Who is being bullied? Who is the person(s) bullying? What happened? Where did it happen? When did it happen? How often does it happen? Names of students who saw it happen (if any)?

Page 34: Bullying 411

THINK ABOUT IT: Which reporting methods are you most

comfortable using if you had to report bullying?

Identify two adults who will listen to you if you ever need to report bullying.

Page 35: Bullying 411

TO WRAP IT UP… Finish this sentence:

The most important thing about bullying that I learned today was ________________?