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Bellwork: Tuesday, 1/21/14

Bellwork: Tuesday, 1/21/14. Take out a sheet of paper, head it correctly, and title it “Commonly Confused Words Quiz #1.” Number 1-10. Turn to page 436. Paper Activity. 1. Take out one sheet of paper and ball it up. 2. Throw it on the floor. 3. Step on it. 4. Place it on top of your desk.

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Bellwork: Tuesday, 1/21/14

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  1. Bellwork: Tuesday, 1/21/14 Take out a sheet of paper, head it correctly, and title it “Commonly Confused Words Quiz #1.” Number 1-10. Turn to page 436.

  2. Paper Activity 1. Take out one sheet of paper and ball it up. 2. Throw it on the floor. 3. Step on it. 4. Place it on top of your desk. 5. Straighten it out as best as you can.

  3. Answer the following in complete sentences and in your own words. • What is bullying? • Who bullies? • Why do people get bullied? • Why do people bully others? What is the motivation? • Where does bullying take place? • How have students negatively responded to bullying? • How have students responded positively to bullying?

  4. Review Questions: Groups: Discuss your answers to each question and add information to your own answers as well. II. Whole Group: Team/Member Selector will be used to select groups/members to respond as a whole group to each question.

  5. GRAFFITI!!!! I will select 7 students to participate. RULES: Write an idea associated with bullying, maybe something that you and/or your group members came up with during discussion. You will have 10 seconds from the time the marker has been passed to you to write an idea. If you do not write the idea in full within 10 seconds, you will be asked to sit down. If you write the same idea as someone else, you will be asked to sit down. If you misspell a word, you will be asked to sit down. The remaining student is the winner!!

  6. Quotes from the movie Bully: What is Bullying? They punch me in the jaw, strangle me, they knock things out of my hand, take things from me, sit on me. They push me so far that I want to become the bully. -ALEX It feels like everybody just turned against me. It was like nine of them, nine or ten of them, calling me stupid and dumb, and they started throwing things at me, and one of the guys said something to me, and he threatened me, telling me what he… -JA’MEYA You can always count on something happening when you’re walking down the hall at school, in the classroom, after school when I’m walking home, or when I’m walking through the parking lot in the morning to school. I wasn’t welcomed at church. I’m not welcomed in a lot of people’s homes. -KELBY If it involves repeated, malicious attempts to humiliate a helpless victim, if the victim is fearful, does not know how to make it stop, then it’s bullying. • Kim Zarzour We knew why Tyler did what he did. There was no doubt in our minds. When you’re in the shower and your clothes are taken, and you have no way of getting out of the gym other than walking out naked… When you’re standing in the bathroom urinating, and kids come up and push you from behind up against the stall and against the wall, and you urinate on your pants. When you’re sitting in the classroom and someone grabs your books and throws them on the floor… it happened to Tyler. DAVID LONG, Tyler’s father http://movies.netflix.com/WiPlayer?movieid=70181711&trkid=13462100&t=Bully&tctx=-99%2C-99%2C1a301455-8483-4cd6-8c0a-3fb87443ce95-5872031

  7. Bullying involves an individual or a group repeatedly harming another person—physically (e.g. punching or pushing), verbally (e.g. teasing or name-calling), or socially (e.g. ostracizing or spreading hurtful rumors). Sometimes these harmful actions are plainly visible, but other times, such as when gossip and rumors are used to ostracize the target, the actions are covert. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, bullying behavior might include assault, tripping, intimidation, rumor spreading and isolation, demands for money, destruction of property, theft of valued possessions, destruction of another’s work, and name-calling. With the advent of the Internet, bullies are able to maintain a more persistent presence in the lives of their victims through cyber-bullying. Bullying often does not happen in an isolated context with a single tormentor and victim. There may be multiple bullies or multiple victims, and there are almost always peers, adults, and other community members who know about the bullying taking place. Often, the victims of bullying are socially vulnerable because they have some characteristic that makes them different from the majority. A person might be singled out because of his or her race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or religious affiliation. Young people who have physical or learning disabilities are also targeted more frequently, as well as students who are on the autism spectrum. Other times, there are no apparent characteristics that cause the target of bullying to be singled out by the tormentor. Regardless, the person being bullied does not know how or does not have the power to make it stop. Recent research suggests that bullying is a common occurrence in United States schools. A 2011 nationwide study found that 40% of teachers and school staff consider bullying a moderate or major problem in their schools and that 32% of students between ages 12-18 report experiencing bullying.

  8. Multiple Intelligences Activities (Picture Smart) Design and create an Anti-Bullying poster to encourage the upcoming 8th graders and the new 7th graders. Make it meaningful and unique. Use color. (Word Smart/People Smart) Develop a written pledge that includes the definition of bullying, examples of bullying, and ways to deal with it. The pledge must include a final statement pledging to maintain awareness of bullying and to take appropriate measures to deal with the situation. (Body Smart) Create a skit that incorporates the idea of bullying and one appropriate way to deal with it. (*Skits must contain appropriate content and situation. This can be done in groups; however, there should be no more than 4 people to a group, and each person must take part in the action of the skit.) (Music Smart) Create a song, rap, or poem that includes the definition of bullying, examples of bullying, and appropriate ways to deal with it. (Be creative! If you choose to write a song or rap, you may get into pairs to develop the lyrics but you must perform it together.) YOU MAY SELECT THE ACTIVITY YOU WANT TO COMPLETE.

  9. Homework: Tuesday, 1/21/14 Study the definitions of the commonly confused words for a TEST tomorrow!

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