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Responding to Teasing, Conflict and Bullying. Christa M. Tinari, MA Peace Praxis Training and Consulting www.peacepraxis.com. St. Maximilian Kolbe School October 4, 2010. Learning Objectives. Explore the differences between teasing, conflict and bullying
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Responding to Teasing, Conflict and Bullying Christa M. Tinari, MA Peace Praxis Training and Consulting www.peacepraxis.com St. Maximilian Kolbe School October 4, 2010
Learning Objectives • Explore the differences between teasing, conflict and bullying • Learn how to help your children handle these issues • Understand the prevention and intervention strategies implemented at the classroom and school levels
Behaviors Pyramid Bullying Intentional Fighting Conflict Social Exclusion Threats Teasing Disrespect Unskilled/Unintentional
Definition Of Teasing Criteria for determining teasing: • Sarcasm, unwanted nicknames, taunting • Making fun of difference • May be done for peer attention/laughs • Boundary-testing • Both students may be actively involved • Causes embarrassment, humiliation, anxiety, anger
Definition Of Conflict Criteria for determining peer conflict: • Perceived incompatibility of needs, wants, goals • Specific to a particular issue/incident • Behavior is focused on goal, not harm • Happens between relative equals, and does not create lasting power imbalance • May evoke frustration, anxiety and anger • Many choices for solving the problem • Problem may be worked out together
Definition Of Bullying Criteria for determining bullying: • Physical, emotional, relational acts of intimidation and aggression • Repeated, over time • Harmful intent towards victim • Creates or reinforces power imbalance • Results in humiliation, anger, anxiety, fear, injury, physical symptoms
YOU DECIDE Teasing? Conflict? Bullying?
Preventing Teasing • Develop empathy and perspective-taking • Asking “how does it feel to be made fun of?” • Teach the difference between “having fun” and “making fun” • Challenge popular culture/media • Rules and consequences for teasing • Family Pledge
Challenging Pop Culture/Media • Monitor TV, movies, magazines, etc. • Watch with your children and question events, do a reality test • Don’t let pop culture have the last word! • Review ground rules for social networking (Facebook, etc.) • Become tech savvy!
Family Pledge • Create your family pledge together • List behaviors that will convey love and respect (no put-downs!) • Discuss what might be challenging • Discuss how to help one another • Decide how broken promises will be addressed (Apology of Action) • Check in about the pledge periodically
Apology of Action • Ask your child to reflect on how his/her behavior has impacted another • Do not require child to make a verbal apology • Give your child the responsibility to “right” the wrong through an action (show me) • Check back about what happened
Responding to Teasing • Pretend you don’t hear it & disagree in your mind • Give a “you’re crazy” look and walk away • Use an assertive statement • I don’t like to be called that. Please stop. • Sort of agree (That’s possible, but…) • Claim it as a strength (My outfit is awesome, thanks) • Join another group Don’t boomerang!
6 Ways to Handle Conflict • Accommodate- give in • Avoid- don’t address • Compete- fight for what you want • Compromise- each person gets some of what they want • Collaborate- work together so that everyone gets what they want • Appeal to a 3rd Party- another person helps or decides
Skills for Conflict Resolution • Stop & Think • Assertive Language • Listening • Apologizing • Brainstorming • Choose a Solution
Talking About Conflict • How do you feel about what happened? • How do you think the other person feels? • What would you like to see happen? • What could you do to solve the problem? • Let’s practice what you will say/do ... • Who can you go to at school for help?
Talking About Bullying • Listen empathetically and calmly • Offer praise and recognition • Find out about your child’s specific concerns • Rehearse words and actions • Encourage your child to report • Contact the school
Teaching Studentsto beUpstanders • Model and teach empathy • Discuss upstander behaviors and language • Role play bullying scenarios- practice upstander behaviors and language • Develop help strategies • Enlist support from other bystanders • Get help from an adult; report • Support- buddy, empathize, etc.
Upstander Behavior • Respects people, even those who are ‘different’ • Befriends students who are new to the group • Refrains from teasing, gossip and bullying • Uses humor, assertion and social influence to discourage others from teasing & bullying • Speaks out when others are mis-treated • Reports situations to adults and gets help
Upstander Language Said to the teaser/bully: • Some people might think that’s funny, but I don’t/it’s not. • You’re going too far. • Not cool! • It’s not ok with me when _____ feels upset. • Stop (name the behavior) now. • Do you really think that’s a good idea? I don’t.
Upstander Language Said to the target: • It’s not ok with me when _____ does that. • Come play with us. • You don’t deserve that treatment. • I’m sorry that happened. Do you want help? • Have you told a teacher about this? I think you should. I’ll go with you.
Classroom Practices • Classroom Pledge/Charter • Morning Meeting/Social Skills Instruction • Cooperative Groups • Character Education • Conflict Resolution Lessons (S.T.A.R.) • Bullying Awareness/Upstander Practice • Apology of Action/Responsibility
School-wide Prevention • School climate team/counselors • No put-downs campaign • Staff training in bullying awareness, prevention & intervention • Discipline policies • Strategic staff presence • Reporting procedures • Recognition for Positive Behavior
Parent-School Connection • Reinforce expectations and messages • Model the desired behavior • Communicate! • Make a plan/follow-up/check-back • Focus on empowerment • Work together on solutions
Together, we can reduce teasing, conflict and bullying, reinforce respectful behavior, and create a safe, caring, productive school for ALL students.