bullying and your child: what you need to know about the newly-enacted anti-bullying bill of rights

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Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly- Enacted Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights South Brunswick Parent Academy October 19, 2011 7-8:30 pm Crossroads North Cafeteria

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Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights. South Brunswick Parent Academy October 19, 2011 7-8:30 pm Crossroads North Cafeteria . Welcome!. Please complete the pre-session questions on the survey and set it aside. Thank you!. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know

About the Newly-Enacted Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

South Brunswick Parent AcademyOctober 19, 2011

7-8:30 pmCrossroads North Cafeteria

Page 2: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Welcome!

• Please complete the pre-session questions on the survey and set it aside.

Thank you!

Page 3: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

http://southbrunswick.patch.com

Page 4: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Goals

LEARN…• How to recognize harassment,

intimidation and bullying• How South Brunswick Schools

address these H.I.B. issues• How to use strategies to empower

your child to handle all kinds of bullying including cyber bullying

Page 5: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Conflict

• Conflict is normal and part of growing up

• Constructive conflict helps kids grow up and become more tolerant develop coping skills

• Conflict is NOT bullying

Page 6: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Role Play

Page 7: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

What is Bullying?

• Bullying happens…When there is an imbalance of power

WHEN IS IT HIB?

Page 8: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Raising Awareness about the HIB Policy

Page 9: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

To strengthen standards for preventing, reporting,

investigating, and responding to incidents of bullying and reduce the risk of suicide

among students.

Page 10: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

2002 NJ HIB Law enacted mandating a district/school policy

2007 Revised to include Cyber Bullying

2009 Revised to include annual distribution and posting to the web

2011 NEW NJ HIB Law enacted aka “Anti Bullying Bill of Rights” Broadest law in the United States

Page 11: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Principal Direct report

Anti Bullying Coordinator (ABC) District overseer Coordinator of Anti Bullying Specialists

Anti Bullying Specialist (ABS) Investigator Chair of School Safety/Climate Team

School Safety/Climate Team Oversees “climate” of school: trends, trouble

spots

Page 12: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

All Board members, school employees, and volunteers and contracted service providers who have contact with pupils are required to report alleged violations of this Policy to the Principal or the Principal’s designee…

Page 13: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

HIB means any gesture, any written, verbal or physical act, or any electronic communication, whether it be a single incident or a series of incidents, that:1. is reasonably perceived as being motivated

either by any actual or perceived characteristic, such as race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, or a mental, physical or sensory disability, or

2. by any other distinguishing characteristic “Electronic communication” means a communication transmitted by means of an electronic device, including, but not limited to, a telephone, cellular phone, computer, or pager.  

Page 14: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

3. that takes place on school property, at any school-sponsored function, on a school bus, or off school grounds… that substantially disrupts or interferes with the orderly operation of the school or the rights of other students

Page 15: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

4. A reasonable person should know, under the circumstances, that the act(s) will have the effect of physically or emotionally harming a pupil or damaging the pupil’s property, or placing a pupil in reasonable fear of physical or emotional harm to his/her person or damage to his/her property; or

5. Has the effect of insulting or demeaning any pupil or group of pupils; or

6. Creates a hostile educational environment for the pupil by interfering with a pupil’s education or by severely or pervasively causing physical or emotional harm to the pupil.

Page 16: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

There is a Standardized Timeline for response and report. Unalterable

There are Standardized Forms Report Form Initial parent letter- Bully version & Target

version Investigation Report: Pupil Accused Investigation Report: Non Pupil Accused Interview Form (target, witness, accused)

Page 17: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Parent Education SB Parent Academy HIB Seminars (Fall)

Student Education First Two Weeks (Age-appropriate definition,

Off School Grounds, AUP & Cyber Bullying) Week of Respect (10/3) Violence & Vandalism Awareness Week

(10/17) Yearlong integration into all subjects

Page 18: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Bullying is not conflict; it’s abuse. Bullying thrives on silence. Upstanders are the key. Can’t judge a bully by how he/she looks. HIB is about behavior. HIB is about motivation. Keep your eye on the “target.” HIB is about how the target feels and

reacts.

Page 19: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

ANTI BULLYING COORDINATOR (ABC)JUDY MCCORMICK

Jackie Turner (BA) Alice Priano (BC/DE) Peggy Ehrhardt (CA) Amy Finkelstein (CO) Lori Woods (GB)

Amy Bertelsen-Robles (IF/ DA)

Lynne Sultan-Weinstein (MJ) Vicki Moses (XRDN) Scott Roth (XRDS) Anastasia Marcella (SBHS)

ANTI BULLYING SPECIALISTS (ABS)

Page 20: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Motivated by aCharacteristic

+Location

(If off school grounds: must create a substantial disruption.) +

Intent/Effectto harm

HIB

Page 21: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

What are the types of bullying?

• Physical• Verbal• Social/Relational• Cyber

Page 22: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Who are the players in bullying?

• The bully• The target/victim• The bystander• The upstander

Page 23: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

The Bully

May…• Get a feeling of excitement from the

reaction of the targeted victim.• Thrive on feelings of dominance and

power.• Possess low levels of empathy and

compassion.• Have an inflated sense of self-worth.

Page 24: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

The Target

May…• Have been teased by other students

and had an extreme reaction.• Be overly sensitive and show it.• Depend on adults for emotional

support more than most their age.• Rarely report incidents of bullying.• Not believe adults can help.

Page 25: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Keep in mind…

Sometimes the target is bullied

for no apparent reason.

Page 26: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

The Bystander

DEFINITION:A person who is present but not

involved.• Makes up approximately 85% of a school

population ~ “the silent majority”.• Most ignored and underused resources in

the schools.• Becomes desensitized over time

(diminished empathy).

Page 27: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

The Upstander

DEFINITION:A person who is present and makes

a decision to get involved.

• Upstanders can make a difference! They can break the cycle of bullying.

Page 28: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Let’s watch…

Page 29: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

If You Think Your Child May Be a Bully…

• Keep an eye on your child’s media use.• Set limits and enforce consistent consequences.• Model and practice respect and empathy.• Utilize available counseling services for support.• Contact school administrators or a teacher.

-> Refer to the orange pamphlet for more suggestions.

Page 30: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

If You Think Your Child May Be a Target of Bullying…

• Focus on your child.• Keep a log of the events with the help of your child. • Discourage retaliation.• Contact the school administration/counseling

services.• Discuss appropriate emotional reactions and self-

control.• Encourage your child to get involved in

extracurricular activities.• Reinforce strategies taught in school.• Contact a trusted adult.

Page 31: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

How to Help Your Child Become an Upstander

• Encourage Empathy.• Talk to your child about what to

do if they see bullying.• Role play scenarios with your child

using these strategies.

Page 32: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Building Upstanders

• Normalize fears and worries.• Emphasize strength in numbers.• Communicate the expectation to

take action.• Teach skills and strategies to take a

stand.• Notice and acknowledge caring

behaviors.

Page 33: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Don’t reply to abusive messages. That may only encourage the bully.

1

Keep a record of events/messages or pictures. You will need them for the police or the ISP, or mobile phone company to trace the bully.

2

Think before you send pictures of someone via e-mail, or mobile phone. They can spread far beyond your circle of friends.

3If you receive a rude image or text about someone else, do not forward it. You could be assisting a bully or breaking the law.

4

You have a right not to be harassed and bullied online. Make sure you tell someone.

5

Treat your password like your toothbrush. Don’t let anyone else use it.

6

Encourage good digital citizenship …

Page 34: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

What Parents Can Do

• Remind children to keep their passwords a secret from everyone except you

• Tell your children that it’s not their fault if they become victims of cyber bullying, but it is important for them to tell you if they become victimized

Page 35: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

What Parents Can Do

• Help victims keep a record of electronic bullying incidents

• If the electronic bullying involves threats and harassment or frequent cyber-attacks, call the police to ensure your child’s safety

Page 36: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

What Parents Can Do

• Remember that cyber bullying incidents sometimes end violently. Although it is not possible to prevent cyber bullying, when we become aware of it, it is important to stop it as soon as possible!

Page 37: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Code of Student Conduct:Core Values

Annual Handbook

Explicit Instruction:Home & School Partnership

Character Education: The Approach

The function of education is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically... Intelligence plus character – that is the goal of

true education. Martin Luther King Jr.

Harassment, Intimidation & Bullying:State Legislation & District Policy

Page 38: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Activity

• The facilitator will read the book to your group.

• Identify the players: Who is the bully? The target? The bystanders? The upstanders?

• Answer the question at the end of the book.• Is the situation HIB or not?• We will share out with the large group.

Page 39: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Let’s welcome our students!

Page 40: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

BULLY

A person who uses his/her power unfairly to hurt someone.

Page 41: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

TARGET

A person who is picked-on by the bully

Page 42: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

BYSTANDER

A person who sees or knows of someone being bullied and chooses not to help stop the bullying.

Page 43: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

UPSTANDER - A person who sees someone

being bullied and makes a choice to say "stop" or  reports the bullying to a trusted adult.

-The opposite of a bystander. A person who stands up. Not a person who stands by.

Page 44: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Activity

• The facilitator will read the book to your group.

• Identify the players: Who is the bully? The target? The bystanders? The upstanders?

• Answer the question at the end of the book.• Is the situation HIB or not?• We will share out with the large group.

Page 45: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Please complete the final survey questions and return it!

Thanks!

Closing Remarks

Page 46: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

http://blogs.sbschools.org/sbpa/

Page 47: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Reply to the blog

Page 48: Bullying and Your Child: What You Need to Know About the Newly-Enacted  Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights

Contact Information for Presenters

• Judy McCormick, HIB [email protected]

• Amy Bertelsen-Robles, Indian [email protected]

• Amy Finkelstein, [email protected]

• Ann Jahr, Staff Developer for [email protected]

• Leslie Lillian, Deans [email protected]

• Cindy Patrych-Brotman, [email protected]

• Alice Priano, Brooks Crossing Alice,[email protected]