bullying in our schools

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Bullying in Our Schools Donna Toscano Larios Our Lady Queen of Martyrs School [email protected]

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Bullying in Our Schools. Donna Toscano Larios Our Lady Queen of Martyrs School [email protected]. Steps of the Public Policy Analysis (PPA). 1. Define the Problem 2. Gather the Evidence 3. Identify Causes 4. Examine Existing Policy 5. Develop Solutions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bullying in Our Schools

Bullying in Our SchoolsDonna Toscano Larios

Our Lady Queen of Martyrs [email protected]

Page 2: Bullying in Our Schools

Steps of the Public Policy Analysis (PPA)

1. Define the Problem2. Gather the Evidence3. Identify Causes4. Examine Existing Policy5. Develop Solutions6. Select the Best Solution

Page 3: Bullying in Our Schools

What is bullying?

Page 5: Bullying in Our Schools

Gather the Evidence: Class Survey

1. Have you ever been bullied?2. Have you ever seen anyone else being bullied?3. How did you distinguish it as bullying?4. What did you do about it?

Class Activity

Page 6: Bullying in Our Schools

Types of bullying:physical attacks (for example, shoving into

lockers, punching or kicking)verbal attacks (calling names, making cruel

remarks or “making fun” of someone)social attacks (spreading rumors,

sabotaging friendships or deliberately excluding others)online attacks, or 

Cyber-bullying (texting, emailing or posting on a website anything that is cruel, untrue or otherwise harmful about a person

Page 7: Bullying in Our Schools

Identify the Causes:Possible causes for bullying behavior:

Causes

Page 8: Bullying in Our Schools

Environmental Factors Home Violence is accepted and used as a means for solving disputes is one that helps raise

bullies.

Homes in which bullies live will most likely be:

Homes that are void of consistent adult supervision.

Homes that people hostile to each other.

Homes that are supportive of aggression as a way of solving conflicts.

In neighborhoods where violence is commonplace.

Run by adults who model bully behavior (either consciously or not).

Page 9: Bullying in Our Schools

Environmental Factors (continued)School

More than 80% of students report being the victim of bullying at school. Students forced into competition and social interactions tend to polarize into groups. Grouping can lead to feelings ofacceptance or non-acceptance, and breed bullying behavior. Schools which have no clear definition, policy and plan for bullies tend to contribute to the problem.

Page 10: Bullying in Our Schools

Environmental Factors (continued)Community

Communities that:

are crowded because of poor housing conditions.

have a greater number of impoverished families.

have few or no positive recreational opportunities for kids.

have few or no positive connections with police or city resources.

allow gangs to be the primary influence of children in the streets.

Page 11: Bullying in Our Schools

Personal Risk FactorsYoung bullies are usually children:

without adequate supervision.

who were once victims of other bullies.

who are without positive role models.

who are fascinated or obsessed with video violence (i.e. television, video games, etc.). whose physical or psychological attributes allow them to dominate other children.

Page 12: Bullying in Our Schools

Develop Solutions:Solutions for Bullying

If you are being bullied: tell them to stop, get away from the situation, and tell a trusted adult.

If you see someone being bullied, get involved: Tell the person to stop, get a trusted adult, reach out and be friends.

In Your School: Learn and help train all adults and youth on how to recognize and respond to bullying.

With Others Who Care: Start an  Anti-bullying Club where youth lead in finding solutions.

In Your School and the Entire Community: Create an identity-safe climate where all people are respected.

Solutions: