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Outcomes. Define bullying and harassmentDiscuss the Anti-Harassment and Bullying legislationLearn to incorporate anti-bullying and harassment prevention and response practices into PBS. Bullying and Harassment Facts . National School Safety Center called bullying the most enduring and underrated
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2. PBS: Preventing and Responding to Bullying and Harassment Angelisa Braaksma Fynaardt, PhD
John Richardson, LISW
With thanks to Rob Horner, George Sugai, & the OSEP Technical Center at the University of Oregon
3. Outcomes Define bullying and harassment
Discuss the Anti-Harassment and Bullying legislation
Learn to incorporate anti-bullying and harassment prevention and response practices into PBS
Modify these outcomes based upon the content selected for presentation. Modify these outcomes based upon the content selected for presentation.
4. Bullying and Harassment Facts National School Safety Center called bullying the most enduring and underrated problem in US schools
15-30% of students are bullies or targets
5. Bullying and Harassment Facts Nansel etal study (2001) found
students reported bullying others sometimes or more often during the school term
reported being bullied sometimes or more often
reported bullying and being bullied
19%
17%
6.3% Nansel and colleagues studies a national sample of 15,600 students in grades 6 - 10. Resulted in
Show the findings and ask the groups to estimate the % for each. After brief discussion, present the answers and compare with each groups estimate.Nansel and colleagues studies a national sample of 15,600 students in grades 6 - 10. Resulted in
Show the findings and ask the groups to estimate the % for each. After brief discussion, present the answers and compare with each groups estimate.
6. Bullying and Harassment Facts ___ of students believe that schools responds poorly to bullying, with a high percentage believing that adult help is infrequent and ineffective
___ of teachers see nothing wrong with bullying or putdowns
Teachers intervene in only ___ of bullying incidents
Over two-thirds
25%
4% Repeat the process from the previous slide.Repeat the process from the previous slide.
7. Definition from the New Law Harassment and bullying shall be construed to mean any electronic, written, verbal, or physical act or conduct toward a student which is based on any actual or perceived trait or characteristic of the student and which creates an objectively hostile school environment that meets one or more of the following conditions:
8.
one or more of the following conditions: Places the student in reasonable fear of harm to the student's person or property
Has a substantially detrimental effect on the student's physical or mental health
Has the effect of substantially interfering with a student's academic performance
Has the effect of substantially interfering with the student's ability to participate in or benefit from the services, activities, or privileges provided by a school
9. Protected Classes Age
Color
Creed
National origin
Race
Religion
Marital status
Political party preference
Political belief Sex
Sexual orientation
Gender identity
Physical attributes
Physical or mental ability or disability
Ancestry
Socioeconomic status
Familial status This could be an activity:
Ask participants to identify protected classes, write on sheet
After completing the list, check off each as it is shown on the slide
Add those that we not on the written listThis could be an activity:
Ask participants to identify protected classes, write on sheet
After completing the list, check off each as it is shown on the slide
Add those that we not on the written list
10. Bullying Behavior Characterized by 3 criteria
It is aggressive behavior or intentional harm doing
It is carried out repeatedly and over time
It occurs within an interpersonal relationship characterized by an imbalance of power
11. Why Does Bullying Continue? Bullying behavior typically becomes more likely because the victims or bystanders provide rewards for bullying behaviors.
Social attention
Social recognition
Social status
12. This chart reveals some of the differences between rough play, real fighting, and actual bullying behaviors.
Present/discuss each box on the chart. The first row refers to friendship. The second row discusses the balance of power in the relationships. The third is about the intent to harm another person and the fourth refers to affect between the participants.This chart reveals some of the differences between rough play, real fighting, and actual bullying behaviors.
Present/discuss each box on the chart. The first row refers to friendship. The second row discusses the balance of power in the relationships. The third is about the intent to harm another person and the fourth refers to affect between the participants.
13. Note it is important for students and staff to be able to recognize different forms of bullying and harassment.
This table can be used with both groups as a teaching tool and visual reminder.Note it is important for students and staff to be able to recognize different forms of bullying and harassment.
This table can be used with both groups as a teaching tool and visual reminder.
14. Discussion Which of these behaviors have you seen?
Discuss the behaviors that you have either witnessed or know to have been reported at your school.
Be prepared to share out So, lets take some time to think about bullying behaviors. Have group share out examples of what they think is bullying.
If they dont include indirect and nonphysical examples, prompt them to think about it.So, lets take some time to think about bullying behaviors. Have group share out examples of what they think is bullying.
If they dont include indirect and nonphysical examples, prompt them to think about it.
15. 10 Elements in a Quality Bully Prevention Program Adapted from "Bully Prevention and Intervention in a Post-Columbine Era" workshop at the Power and Empowerment: Iowa Governor's Conference on Bullying and Harassment, January 27, 2005, Ames Iowa, Susan P. Limber, PhD, presenter Posted on the AEA267 Website http://www.aea267.k12.ia.us School Climate and Behavior
16. 10 Elements in a Quality Bully Prevention Program 1. A focus on the entire school environment
(system-wide)
2. Assess bullying at school
(needs assessment)
3. Support bully prevention
(proactive v. reactive)
4. Coordinating group
(system involvement)
5. Train all staff
(system involvement)
6. Establish and enforce school rules and policies
(thoughtful consequence system) Refer to the 10 Elements hand-out.Refer to the 10 Elements hand-out.
17. 10 Elements in a Quality Bully Prevention Program 7. Increase adult supervision
(active supervision)
8. Intervene consistently and appropriately
(thoughtful consequence system)
9. Focus class time on bullying prevention
(teach expectations)
10. Continue the effort over time
(sustainability)
Adapted from "Bully Prevention and Intervention in a Post-Columbine Era" workshop at the Power and Empowerment: Iowa Governor's Conference on Bullying and Harassment, January 27, 2005, Ames Iowa, Susan P. Limber, PhD, presenter Posted on the AEA267 Website http://www.aea267.k12.ia.us School Climate and Behavior
18. 10 Elements rating scale In your teams, review the elements
Rate your school on a 1-10 scale (10=in place)
Keep as a reference for action planning.
20. Approaching Bullying and Harassment Moving from REACTIVE
to PREVENTATIVE
and PROACTIVE
21. Proactive vs. Reactive Hand-out
23. Create Effective Learning Environments Create environments that are:
Predictable
Consistent
Positive
Safe
24. Bully Surveys Olweus Bully-Victim Questionnaire
29 items
Grades 3 and higher
Questions read out loud
Computer program available to analyze
$280 for questionnaire and statistical program
Questions address being bullied, being a bully, types of bullying, locations, and outcomes
25. Bully Surveys (cont.) Bully-Proofing Your Schools (Sopris-West)
Student, parent, and staff surveys available
Elementary and secondary
Questions address being bullied, locations, and bystander behavior
Some questions about overall school climate
On-line surveys through AEA
Contact Andrea Matheson at Heartland AEA
26. Safety and Climate Surveys School Safety Survey [Sprague, Colvin, & Irvin (1995)] (available at www.pbis.org)
Assesses risk factors for school safety and violence
Assesses response plans for school safety and violence
California School Climate and Safety Survey (available in Safe, Supportive, & Successful Schools)
Elementary and secondary versions
Questions address safety, violence, bullying, peer and adult support
School Culture Triage Survey
17 questions address school culture (e.g., collaboration, collegiality, efficacy, self-determination)
Given to staff members
27. Teach Students to Identify Problem Behavior The key is to focus on what is appropriate:
Teaching school-wide expectations, and teach that all problem behaviors are an example of NOT being appropriate
Define most common problem behaviors; use these behaviors as non-examples of school-wide expectations
Are these behaviors currently included in instruction?
28. Suggested steps Imbed anti-bullying and harassment expectations (positive definitions) within behavior matrix and classroom practices
Teach stop, walk, talk to all students
Targets
Bullies
By-standers
29. Teach Stop, Walk, Talk A behavioral skill set taught to all staff and students.
Provides students with a consistent response to problem behavior.
Provides staff with consistent response to student reports of bullying and harassment.
Adult response: when student reports
Adult response: when adult witnesses
Follow district policy re: reporting, investigating, consequences
30. Step 1: Teach a Stop Signal If someone is directing problem behavior to you, tell them to stop
If someone is directing problem behavior to someone else, tell them to stop
What is the Stop Signal for your school?
Stop
Enough
31. Step 2: Teach walk away (Walk) Teach the target to walk
Leave the situation. Find an adult.
Where should you go?
Why? You walk so you do not reward inappropriate behavior: Victim behavior inadvertently maintains taunt, tease, intimidate, harassment behavior.
32. Step 3: Teach getting help (Talk)
Report problem to an adult
When problem behavior is reported, staff follow a specific school-wide response:
Reinforce the student for reporting the problem behavior (i.e. "I'm glad you told me.")
"Did you tell the student to stop?" (If yes, praise the student for using an appropriate response)
"Did you walk away from the problem behavior?" (If yes, praise student for using appropriate response
Now gather details of the specific incident
33. Staff Interaction with the Bully When staff witness bullying
1) Immediately stop the bullying
2) Name the bullying behavior and refer to the school-wide expectation against bullying
34. Staff Interaction with the Bully When bullying is reported to staff
Prior to gathering information about the specifics of the incident, ask:
"Did ______ tell you to stop?"
If yes: "How did you respond?" Follow with step 2
If no: Practice the 3 step response.
"Did ______ walk away?"
If yes: "How did you respond?" Follow with step 3
If no: Practice the 3 step response.
Practice the 3 step response.
35. Students clearly understand What they should do if problem behavior is directed at them.
What they should do if they are told to stop.
What they should do if they witness problem behavior.
What adults will do when they report problem behavior
36. Adults clearly understand How to respond to the target when problem behavior is reported.
How to respond to the bully when problem behavior is reported.
What to do if they witness problem behavior.
37. Data Recorded Report
Behavior reported
Behavior observed
Location Recipient
Used Stop & Walk Away procedure
Reported the incident
Perpetrator
Saw the Stop signal
Saw recipient walk away
Practiced 3 step response
39. Follow up
Report the incident according to district policy
Investigator talks to the bully, target, and bystanders to get more information
Always conduct separate talks with the victim and bully - never have them confront each other
Determine if the incident was founded (according to policy and record data for state reporting)
Impose consequences for the bully
Notify parents
41. Whats Next? Suggested Next Steps (add to Action Plan)
Learn more about your districts current policy
Conduct a Needs Assessment related to bullying and harassment
PBS Team can look to incorporate bully prevention practices into the current PBS system
42. Additional information http://www.pbis.org
49. Contact Information:Heartland AEA Learning Supports Consultants Angelisa Braaksma Fynaardt (1-800-255-0405 x 17112 or afynaardt@aea11.k12.ia.us)
John Richardson (712-830-2892, jrichardson@aea11.k12.ia.us)
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