1 / 36

No Child Deserves To Be A Statistic

No Child Deserves To Be A Statistic. Especially A Tragic One. National Anti-Bullying Month is October. A Time To Raise Awareness about Anti-Bullying Efforts. Bullying. Bullying is taking a different approach with cyber bullying becoming more and more rampant in school and after school.

Download Presentation

No Child Deserves To Be A Statistic

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. No Child Deserves To Be A Statistic Especially A Tragic One

  2. National Anti-Bullying Month is October • A Time To Raise Awareness about Anti-Bullying Efforts

  3. Bullying • Bullying is taking a different approach with cyber bullying becoming more and more rampant in school and after school. • Cyber Bullying- bullying through email, instant messaging, in a chat room, on a Web-site, or through digital messages or images sent to a cell phone. • Social Networking has provided an entirely new environment for bullying to take place.

  4. Teens Popular AcronymsGetting Familiar with Today’s Language • CD9 – Parents are around • LOL – Laughing out loud • MorF – Male or Female • Noob – Often an insult to somebody who doesn’t know much about something. • GNOC – Get naked on camera (webcam) • (L)MIRL – (let’s) meet in real life • MOS – Mom over shoulder • PIR – Parents in room • PRW – Parents are watching • TDTM – Talk dirty to me.

  5. Bully Statistics • 160,000 kids stayed home today because they are afraid of being bullied. • 61% of students said they believe students shoot others at school because they have been victims of physical violence at home or at school.

  6. Bully Statistics • About 56% of all students have witnessed a bullying crime take place while at school. • 71% of students report bullying as an on- going problem.

  7. Bully Statistics • 1 out of every 10 students drops out or changes school because of repeated bullying. • 1 out of every 20 students has seen a student with a gun at school • Source:ehow.com

  8. Bullycide Statistics • Suicide continues to be one of the leading causes of death among children under the age of 14 • Bullycide – is a term used to describe suicide as a result of bullying. • Suicide rates are continuing to grow among adolescents, and have grown more than 50% in the past 30 years. • Bullying can include various types of behavior from physical attacks, to destroying one’s personal property or clothing, verbal abuse, starting rumors, name calling, verbal attacks online. • Source: bullying statistics.org

  9. 11 Facts About Bullying • Over 3.2 million students are victims of bullying each year. • 1 in 4 teachers see nothing wrong with bullying and will only intervene 4% of the time. • 1 in 7 students in grades K-12 is either a bully or a victim of bullying. • Approximately 160,000 teens skip school every day because of bullying. • 56% of students have personally witnessed some type of bullying at school. • Over two-thirds of students believe that schools respond poorly to bullying with a high percentage of students believing that adult help is infrequent and ineffective.

  10. 11 Facts About Bullying (cont.) • 71% of students report incidents of bullying as a problem at their school. • 90 % of 4th through 8th graders report being victims of bullying. • 1 out of 10 students drop out of school because of repeated bullying. • Harassment and bullying have been linked to 75% of school-shooting incidents. • Physical bullying increases in elementary school, peaks in middle school and declines in high school. Verbal abuse, on the other hand, remains constant. • Source: www.dosomething.org

  11. Bullied to Death at 15Kristina Calco

  12. Why Bullies Bully? • Most common theories suggest that bullies primarily want to gain status among their peers. • Two needs underlie this drive for status  • Need for Popularity • Need for Domination • Bullies who primarily desire Popularity seek out victims who have been rejected by their peers. • Bullies who primarily desire Domination look for victims that are vulnerable and unable to defend themselves. • They seek victims who can be dominated easily and who ideally won’t tell anyone.

  13. Contrary to what people belief, bullies often have high self esteem. • Bullies can lose their moral compass when driven by their peers • Simple reason is it shows they have power over others. • The reason they do it repeatedly is because they are getting away with it. • Nobody is calling them on their bad behavior • When they aren’t called on it they think it’s OK. • Evidence shows that bullies often suffer from social and emotional problems

  14. A Big Myth • Is that bullies bully because they feel bad about themselves. • Research shows that they have average or above average self-esteem. • Research also emphasizes parents play a role, • “If parents are modeling Aggression kids might learn that.” • Reality is that we’re not talking to kids early enough and long enough about bullying and healthy relationships.

  15. What are the Warning Signs that a Child is Being Bullied? • Decline in quality of academic performance • Seems happy on weekends but unhappy and preoccupied or tense on Sundays. • Sudden decrease in school attendance or skipping certain classes. • Sudden lack of interest in school-supported activities and events. • Uses “victim” body language: hunches shoulders, hangs head, will not look people in the eye, and backs off from others. • Suddenly prefers the company of adults. • Suddenly develops a stammer or stutter. • Carries protection devices (knife, box opener, fork, gun) • Possessions (books, money, clothing) are often “lost,” damaged, or destroyed without an explanation.

  16. Effects of Bullying on the Target • Stomach aches • Weight loss • Headaches • Drop in grades • Drug or alcohol use • Sexual Activity • Physical Aggression • Suicidal • Alienation • Low self esteem • Insecurity • FEAR • Depression • Withdrawn • Anger • Vengeful • Source: HRSA

  17. How Are Boys and Girls Different In Their Bullying? • Both boys and girls use verbal aggression • mocking • name-calling • teasing • mean telephone calls, • verbal threats of aggression • intimidation • graffiti • publicly challenging someone to do something • playing a dirty trick • taking possessions • coercion

  18. Boy Bullies: • Boys bully both boys and girls (Olweus, 1993). • Boys use more direct behaviors (physical and verbal bullying) than girls do. • They usually use more indirect bullying as their verbal skills increase (Mullin-Rindler, 2002 • Boys use more physical aggression • Boys are just as likely as girls to use social and emotional taunting.

  19. Girl Bullies: • Girls are aggressive, and use more indirect behaviors to damage relationships and can be sneaky and nasty. • Girls are becoming more physical in bullying than in the past. • Girls bully in groups more than boys. • Girls seek to inflict psychological pain on their victims, which hurts as much as, if not more than, • Girls frequently make comments regarding the sexual behavior of girls they don’t like (Byrne, 1994a, 1994b). • Source: Bullyfree.com/free-resources/facts-about-bullying

  20. There Are Various Reasons Why People Bully • Cultural Causes of Bullying – Our culture is fascinated with winning, power and violence. • Researchers point to World Wrestling Federation (WWF) as glorification of bullies in the name of entertainment. • Institutional Causes – If the institution at which the bullying takes place – whether the home, the school. Or the workplace- does not have high standards for the way people treat each other then bullying may be more likely.

  21. There Are Various Reasons Why People Bully (cont.) • Social Issues – The fact that one gets more recognition for negative behaviors than for positive ones can contribute to reasons why people bully. • Family Issues – Families that are not warm and loving and in which feelings are not shared are more likely to have children who bully. • Another environment that is prone to producing bullies is one where discipline and monitoring is inconsistent. • Source: findarticles.com

  22. We Ask Why? • So, Why do people Bully? There are many reasons, but one thing is clear regardless of why people bully, any type of bullying needs to come to an end. • Source: findarticles.com

  23. Possible reasons for being bullied • The bully or the target are either smaller or bigger than most kids their age. • The target may be a minority.  • May have a disability. • Maybe you have a name that is not ordinary. • Source: www.pbskids.org/its my life

  24. What to do in the Moment

  25. Why Must Bullying Stop? • It is more prevalent today than in the past and occurs in more serious forms today. • The intensity of bullying has increased because more students join in. • There have been numerous criminal cases because of bullying • It creates a fearful school • It is a common theme in school shootings as students retaliate for the bullying. • It causes stress in studnets. • It causes “toxic” shame,” which is destructive to one’s sense of worth (Garbarino, 1999)

  26. Why Must Bullying Stop? (cont.) • It causes some students to harm themselves, cutting themselves, for example. • Thirty percent of all child suicides can be directly related to bullying (Hawker & Boulton, 2000). • It encourages students to run away from home, when they are rejected at home and school. • It encourages gang membership. • It encourages teen pregnancies. Rejected girls may seek someone to love. • It contributes to poor school attendance. • Hostile children are more likely to develop diabetes and develop cardiac problems as they age.

  27. What Are The Signs That My Child Is A Bully • Look for: • Impulsive Behavior • A desire to always be in control • Showing little or no empathy for others • Source:bullyfree.com/freeresources

  28. Bully Proof your Child • Help them develop a sense of self. • Encourage them to learn about themselves and learn and excel being exactly who they are. • Encourage your child to explore activities that make them feel good about themselves. • Encourage courageous behavior “stand up for themselves as well as their peer and friends. • Source: Cnn.com

  29. Peace Is Popular…Bully Is Not • Our Lives Should Be More To Do With Beauty and Less To Do With Pain…….

  30. Make the Best of Each Day

More Related