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Bullying and Harassment Identification and Prevention East Allen County Schools Student Training

Bullying and Harassment Identification and Prevention East Allen County Schools Student Training. 6 out of 10 American teenagers witness bullying in school once a day Bullying affects nearly 1 in 3 American school children in grades 6 through 10

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Bullying and Harassment Identification and Prevention East Allen County Schools Student Training

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  1. Bullying and Harassment Identification and PreventionEast Allen County Schools Student Training

  2. 6out of 10 American teenagers witness bullying in school once a day • Bullying affects nearly 1in 3American school children in grades 6through 10 • 83% of girls and 79% of boys report experiencing harassment Source: www.nea.org

  3. Bullying Overview & Terminology

  4. Bullying Prevention & the Law • Bullying is defined for Indiana schools in HEA 1423 • IC 20-33-8-0.2 – “Bullying” means: • Overt (intentional) unwanted, repeated acts or gestures including: • Verbal or Written communication, or imagestransmitted in any manner (including digitally or electronically) • Physical acts committed, aggression, or any other behaviors that are committed by a student or group of students against another student with the intent to • Harass, ridicule, humiliate, intimidate, or harm the targeted student and • Create for the targeted student an objectively hostile school environment

  5. Bullying Prevention & the Law (Cont.) • IC 20-33-8-0.2 (continued )- an “objectively hostile learning environment”: • places the targeted student in reasonable fear or harm to the to the targeted student’s person or property; • has a substantially detrimental effect on the targeted student’s physical or mental health; • has the effect of substantially interfering with the targeted student’s academic performance; OR • has the effect of substantially interfering with the targeted student’s ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, and privileges provided by the school

  6. Title IX What is Title IX Title IX is a federal law that protects students from sexual discrimination. Sexual harassment is a type of discrimination. EACS has policies in place that protects students from being sexually harassed at school, extra-curricular activities, and all other school sponsored events.

  7. Defining Bullying in Simple Terms Unwanted, aggressive behavior Real or perceived power imbalance Repeated or potential for repeated behavior

  8. Sexual Harassment = Unwanted/Unwelcome behavior of a sexual nature • Inappropriate touching - Somebody touching, patting, kissing, pinching, hugging, groping, or brushing up against you when you don’t want them to do it. • Inappropriate gestures - gestures or body language of a sexual nature, including leering or staring at another

  9. Sexual Harassment = Unwanted/Unwelcome behavior of a sexual nature • Repetitive requests - Someone you met puts pressure on you for sex (included repeated requests, staring, or other persistent behavior). • Inappropriate jokes – of a sexual nature. In person or by using technology • Slander/Name Calling - harsh words that defame someone’s character and/or make reference to a person’s actual or perceived sexual orientation

  10. Terminology • Target: Student who has been bullied • Bully: Student who has been identified as exhibiting behavior that was determined to be bullying • Bystander: Student(s) who have observed another student being bullied

  11. Types of Bullying • Physical • Verbal • Social/Relational • Electronic or Written Communication (“Cyberbullying”)

  12. Types of Sexual Harassment • Verbal • Physical - including intimidation • Using Technology – text messages, cyber bullying, use of social media

  13. Physical Bullying Examples: • Hitting/Punching/Pushing • Tripping • Spitting • Breaking someone’s things • Blocking someone’s path • Throwing objects at someone

  14. Verbal Bullying Examples: • Name calling • Mean comments • Mocking • Making fun of you • Insults related to race, disability, gender, sexual orientation • Negative comments about the way you look, dress or act

  15. Social/Relational Bullying Examples: • Spreading rumors • Gossiping • Leaving someone out on purpose • Ignoring • Threatening aggression against people, property or possessions (verbal or written) • Intimidating looks or gestures • Embarrassing someone in public

  16. Electronic or Written Communication Bullying (Cyberbullying) • Inappropriate, derogatory, or threatening electronic messages • Notes • Instant Message • Text • Social network sites • Digital pictures • Website postings • Fake profiles

  17. Bullying is NOT: • There are many types of aggressive behaviors that do not fit the definition of bullying. This does not mean that they are any less serious or do not require intervention. • Peer Conflict • Teen Dating Violence • Hazing • Gang Violence • Stalking • Friendship problems • Short-term argument • Fights

  18. Bullying Prevention & Intervention for Students

  19. Bullying or Harassment can occur anywhere: • in school • at home • in sports • on social media • on the bus • etc.

  20. Prevention • Treat all people with respect and empathy • Foster a positive school climate • Do not ignore bullying or harassment /Do something • Report all bullying and harassment • Discretely • Snitching VS. Reporting

  21. Prevention • Be a Buddy for: • Younger students • Quieter students • You have an opportunity to set a positive example: • In school • Away from school

  22. What Bystanders can do to assist • Ask bully to stop • Don’t support the Bully: • Don’t join the bully • Don’t laugh or spread rumors • Don’t tease or gossip • Support targeted students • Privately w/kind words • Publicly (pick up books, walk with them, include them, etc.)

  23. What Bystanders can do to assist • Report incidents to a trusted adult • Snitching VS. Reporting • Support the targeted students • Do not support the bully • Be assertive not aggressive • Report acts of bullying or harassment to a trusted adult

  24. How Targets of Bullying or Harassment can help themselves • Ignore bullying behavior • Respond with humor • Be assertive not aggressive • Spend time in groups • Request bully or harasser to stop and walk away • Tell a teacher, guidance counselor, principal, parent, Title IX Coordinator or other trusted adult • Get involved in extra curricular activities

  25. The impact on Bullies • School Sanctions • Parental discipline • Criminal prosecution • Harassment • Intimidation • Disorderly Conduct • Battery • Criminal trespass • Computer Trespass

  26. FYI • Intimidation is against the law, just like physical actions and threats • Bullying and harassment can be prosecuted • Athletic or academic status is not a protection • Bullying and harassment at school is taken seriously (Tier one or two consequences or referral to law enforcement)

  27. Remember… It takes everyone working together to make your school a safe and supportive environment where every student feels welcome and ready to learn As a member of this school community, it’s your responsibility to: • Learn about bullying and harassment and how it is different than other behaviors • Report bullying or harassment to a trusted adult • Do your part to make your school a safe place!

  28. Remember… When you see something, do something. Source: www.stopbullying.gov

  29. Who is responsible for ensuring that your school is harassment free: • Principals, Assistant Principals, teachers, staff, and students • EVERYONE!

  30. EACS’ Title IX Coordinator Responsible for EACS’ compliance with Title IX and directs complaint investigations. Amanda Ricketts 1240 State Road 930 E.New Haven, IN 46744 260-446-0100 ext 1009 aricketts@eacs.k12.in.us

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