ANTI-BULLYING
ANCHOR BAY SCHOOL DISTRICT
Parent Presentation
October 27, 2015
Bullying:
How Parents Can
Help
Bullying: What is it?
Bullying is the use of aggression with the
intention of hurting another person. It can
include:
Physical violence and attacks
Verbal taunts, name-calling, put-downs
Threats and intimidation
Stealing of money and possessions
Exclusion from the peer group
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Bullying vs. Childhood
Conflicts
Bullying is intentional. The target does not
knowingly provoke the bully and may have made it
clear that the behavior is unwelcome.
The behavior is often repetitive. Bullying is
generally a repeated action, but can sometimes be a
single incident.
The incident involves hurtful acts,
words, or other behavior. Bullying is
a negative act intended to hurt someone else.
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Bullying vs. Childhood
Conflicts
The act is committed by one or more people
against another. Bullying can be done by a single
person or by a group.
There is a real or perceived imbalance of
power. A child without power cannot bully. Power
can be defined as:
intimidation, physical strength,
or social status
Misperceptions vs. Facts
Misperception: Girls don't bully.
Fact: Girls can and do bully, but often in
a different way. Girls often use verbal and
social bullying. Bullying for girls escalates
during the middle school years.
Misperception: Words will never hurt you.
Fact: Even though words dont leave bruises or
broken bones, they can leave deep emotional scars.
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Misperceptions vs. Facts
Misperception: It was only teasing.
Fact: Teasing in which a child is not hurt is
not considered bullying. Teasing becomes
bullying when the intent of the action is to hurt
or harm.
Misperception: Bullying will make kids
tougher.
Fact: Bullying does NOT make someone tougher. It
often has the opposite effectlowering a childs
sense of self-esteem and self-worth. Bullying creates
fear and increases anxiety for a child.
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Misperceptions vs. Facts
Misperception: Bullying is a normal part of
childhood.
Fact: Bullying may be a common experience, but this
type of aggression toward others should not be tolerated.
Misperception: Children and youth who are bullied
will almost always tell an adult.
Fact: Most studies find that only 25%-50% of
bullied children report to an adult. They may fear
retaliation or that adults won't take their concerns
seriously.
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Misperceptions vs. Facts
Misperception: Children and youth who
bully are mostly loners with few social skills.
Fact: Many bullies are often the cool or popular students.
These students have friends who provide support for their
actions.
Misperception: Bullied kids need to learn how to
deal with bullying on their own.
Fact: Some children have the confidence and skills to stop
bullying when it happens, but many do not. Adults have
critical roles to play in helping to stop bullying, as do other
children who witness or observe bullying.
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3 Types of Bullies
Physical Bullies are action-oriented. This
includes hitting/kicking the victim, or taking/
damaging the victims property. Boys are more
likely to be physical bullies.
Verbal Bullies use words to hurt or humiliate
another person. Includes name-calling, insulting,
and constant teasing. Girls are more likely to be
verbal bullies.
Relational Bullies This type of bullying is linked
to verbal bullying and usually occurs when
children (often girls) spread nasty rumors about
others, or exclude ex-friends from the peer group.
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Targets of Bullies: 4 Common
Traits
They act vulnerable. When bullied, they become visibly
They have few or no friends. Children who are
frightened, cry, or do not have an appropriate response. This
becomes an invitation to even more bullying.
socially isolated are easy targets.
They are not assertive. To the child who bullies, people
who are not assertive seem weak or easily dominated.
Targets are also less likely to tell someone about the bullying.
They have low self-esteem and lack
of self-confidence. Children with low
self-esteem may feel they deserve the bullying.
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Signs/Symptoms of Bullying
Students May:
Be frightened of walking to and from school
Beg you to drive them to school
Be truant
Begin doing poorly in school work
Come home regularly with clothes or books destroyed
Refuse to talk about whats wrong
Have unexplained bruises, cuts, scratches
Begin to bully other children, siblings
Come home starving (lunch money stolen)
Become aggressive or disruptive
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How Can I Help?
Listen: talk about school/friends daily
If your child is bullied, make sure
that your child knows that youre not
disappointed/don t blame him/her.
Ask your child what he/she thinks should be done.
What has your child tried? What worked and what
didnt?
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How
Can
I
Help?
Brainstorm responses with
your child:
Use a response like ok or thanks for your opinion
to show that youre not going to respond to the teasing
Make a joke
Avoid areas where bullies hang out: Travel with friends
Use an I message:
I feel ____________ when ______ because ______. I
would like _________.
TELL A TEACHER/OTHER ADULT!
(see handout for additional ideas)
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How Can I Help?
Follow up with your child: How did it go?
What might be more effective?
Keep in contact with your students teacher
Contact the school counselor for additional
support/suggestions if the situation continues
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How to Protect Yourself from
a Bully
Make up your mind not to be bullied.
Stand straight and walk tall.
Look other kids in the eye.
Stay away from places where bullies hang out.
Treat all students (even the bullies) with respect.
Call for help if a bully starts trouble.
Stay calm. Dont react.
Refuse to fight.
Try talking quietly or use humor.
Walk slowly away.
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An Important Note
The list of solutions to bullying DOES NOT
include telling your child to 'fight back.'
This can be MORE dangerous for
your child (especially if the bully is
older
and stronger). This could also get your child
into trouble with the school, because your
child may be seen as the instigator of a fight,
as opposed to the victim.
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Could my child be the bully?
Has difficulty fitting in
May look/act differently and be
bullied themselves
Recent traumatic event? (divorce/death of loved
one)
Bullying behavior witnessed at home/without
friends: bullying becomes a way of controlling
someone else
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What if my child is the bully?
Dont ignore the situation: ask teacher/
counselor about behaviors seen at school
Ask your child about giving other students a hard
time: Be direct but not accusatory
Ask your child to tell you about what they wish
their school day was like: Look for clues. Is your
child lonely? Struggling academically?
Decide whether you can work with the child to
correct the behavior, or if outside help is needed.
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Family Risk Factors for
Bullying
A lack of warmth and involvement on
the part of parents
Overly permissive parenting (including
a lack of limits for children's behavior)
A lack of supervision by parents
Harsh, physical discipline
Bullying incidences at home.
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Children Who Bully Are More
Likely To:
Get into frequent fights
Be injured in a fight
Vandalize or steal property
Drink alcohol
Smoke
Be truant from school
Drop out of school
Carry a weapon
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How Else Can I Help?
Help build your childs self confidence:
Dont call out your childs faults
Compliment specifically and
sincerely
Encourage involvement in outside
activities/friendship-building
activities
Help your child fit in: consider
appearance; communication skills, etc.
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Books of Interest: Children
Simon's Hook: A Story About Teases
and Put-Downs by Karen Burnett
Oliver Button is a Sissy by Tomi dePaola
Chrysanthemum by Kevin Henkes
Bullies Are a Pain in the Brain by Trevor Romain
Blue Cheese Breath and Stinky Feet: How to Deal
With Bullies by Catherine DePino and Bonnie
Matthews
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Books of Interest: Adults
Queen Bees and Wannabes by Rosalind Wiseman
Easing the Teasing: Helping Your Child Cope with
Name-Calling, Ridicule, and Verbal Bullying by
Judy Freedman
The Parent's Book about Bullying:
Changing the Course of Your Child's Life
by William Voors
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Presentation Resources
www.stopbullying.gov
www.bullyfree.com/free-resources/tipsforparen
ts
www.scholastic.com/parents
(search for
bullying)
http://www.aadl.org/user/lists/19173
(for
teens and young adults)
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