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NO PLACE FOR HATE

NO PLACE FOR HATE. By:KavoneFuqua. NO KIDS SHOULD BE BULLIED. No kid should be bullied if you see kids being bullied speak up and tell a teacher or an adult. DO NOT BE A BULLY BE A STAR. IF KIDS BULLY IT MIGHT MEAN THAT THEY ARE GETTING BULLIED AT HOME OR SOMEWERE ELSE. BULLY FREE ZONE.

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NO PLACE FOR HATE

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  1. NO PLACE FOR HATE By:KavoneFuqua

  2. NO KIDS SHOULD BE BULLIED No kid should be bullied if you see kids being bullied speak up and tell a teacher or an adult.

  3. DO NOT BE A BULLY BE A STAR. IF KIDS BULLY IT MIGHT MEAN THAT THEY ARE GETTING BULLIED AT HOME OR SOMEWERE ELSE.

  4. BULLY FREE ZONE • BULLY FREE ZONE STANDS FOR A PLACE THAT DOSE NOT STAND FOR BULLING and if you bully you are gone

  5. BULLIES ONLY MESS WITH YOU TO GET ON YOUR NERVES

  6. BIG BULLY • IF YOU ARE A BULLY YOU NEED TO STOP IT BECAUSE NO ONE WOULD LIKE YOU.

  7. BIG MEAN BULLY • THIS IS A DOG BULLY!

  8. EXAMPLE • THIS IS A BULLY THAT IS BULLLING SOMEONE SMALLER THEN HIM.

  9. PHYSCIAL BULLING

  10. sentence's • Bullying is the use of force, threat, or coercion to abuse, intimidate, or aggressively to impose domination over others. The behavior is often repeated and habitual. One essential prerequisite is the perception, by the bully or by others, of an imbalance of social or physical power. Behaviors used to assert such domination can include verbal harassment or threat, physical assault or coercion, and such acts may be directed repeatedly towards particular targets. Justifications and rationalizations for such behavior sometimes include differences of class, race, religion, gender, sexuality, appearance, behavior, or ability.[2][3] If bullying is done by a group, it is called mobbing.[4] The target of bullying is sometimes referred to as a "victim ". • Bullying can be defined in many different ways. The UK currently has no legal definition of bullying,[5] while some U.S. states have laws against it.[6] Bullying consists of four basic types of abuse – emotional (sometimes called relational), verbal, physical, and cyber.[7] It typically involves subtle methods of coercion such as intimidation. • Bullying ranges from simple one-on-one bullying to more complex bullying in which the bully may have one or more "lieutenants" who may seem to be willing to assist the primary bully in his or her bullying activities. Bullying in school and the workplace is also referred to as peer abuse.[8] Robert W. Fuller has analyzed bullying in the context of rankism.

  11. DEFINITIONS • Definitions • Bullying may be defined as the activity of repeated, aggressive behavior intended to hurt another person, physically or mentally. Bullying is characterized by an individual behaving in a certain way to gain power over another person.[10] • Norwegian researcher Dan Olweus[11] says bullying occurs when a person is: • 'exposed, repeatedly and over time, to negative actions on the part of one or more other persons'. He says negative actions occur 'when a person intentionally inflicts injury or discomfort upon another person, through physical contact, through words or in other ways.'[citation n

  12. writing • Anti-bullying movement • In the 2000s and 2010s, a cultural movement against bullying gained popularity in the English-speaking world. The first National Bullying Prevention Week was conceived of in Canada in 2000 by Canadian educator and anti-bullying activist Bill Belsey. The charity Act Against Bullying was formed in the UK in 2003. In 2006, National Bullying Prevention Month was declared in the United States. The Suicide of Phoebe Prince in 2010 brought attention to the issue in Massachusetts, and sparked reforms in state education. The It Gets Better Project was started in 2010 to combat gay teen suicides, and Lady Gaga announced the Born This Way Foundation in partnership with Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet & Society in 2011. • A 2012 paper from the Berkman Center, "An Overview of State Anti-Bullying Legislation and Other Related Laws," notes that, as of January 2012, 48 U.S. states had anti-bullying laws, though there is wide variation in their strength and focus. Sixteen states acknowledge that bullies often select their targets based on "creed or religion, disability, gender or sex, nationality or national origin, race, and sexual orientation." Each of the 16 employs a wide array of additional parameters, the paper notes, ranging from age and weight to socioeconomic status. Of the 38 states that have laws encompassing electronic or "cyber bullying" activity, 32 put such offenses under the broader category of bullying and six states define this type of offense separately, the authors report.[18]

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