Transcript Slide 1

Harrassment, Intimidation, and Bullying (HIB)
GSE Training Session
February 18, 2012
Today’s Schedule
EST. TIME
ACTIVITY
COMMENTS
10:00-10:10
Opening remarks
Welcome, purpose, day’s schedule,
& ground rules
Main content coverage
10:10-11:40
11:40-11:55
Whole group
training
Break
11:55-12:40
Facilitated Learning Facilitated table-based learning and sharing
12:40-1:25
Working Lunch
Includes working on Assessment #1
1:25-2:55
Main content coverage
2:55-3:10
Whole group
training
Break
3:10-3:55
Facilitated Learning Facilitated table-based learning and sharing
3:55-4:10
Break
4:10-4:25
Assessment #2
4:25-5:00
Closing session
15-minute summary of takeaway points
followed by 20-minutes Q&A discussion
Ground Rules for Today’s Session
1.
Make sure that you signed the attendance sheet
2.
Totally focus on the HIB training
3.
Phones put away-no texting
4.
Laptops/other personal items put away
5.
Engage and Learn!
6.
Stay to the end and sign out,
verifying full session attendance
Main Topics We Will Address Today
• Nature of bullying and harm from bullying
• Key elements of NJ Anti-Bullying Law
• Approaches to prevent bullying
• Specific strategies and skills
• Related school-based issues to consider
• Things to avoid (Danger Will Robinson!)
A Look at Some Basic Bullying Issues
Generally Speaking, What Is Bullying?
(not focusing on the NJ Anti-Bullying law definition)
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
1. Intentional harmful behavior that involves
unwanted negative actions
2. Involves a pattern of behavior
repeated over time
3. Involves an imbalance of power or strength
Types of Bullying?
(not focusing on the NJ Anti-Bullying law typology)
1. Verbal
2. Physical
3. Social/Psychological
4. Cyberbullying
Bullying by Grade Level
Percentage of Students
Percent of all students ages 12-18 who reported being bullied
during the 2008-2009 school year, by grade level
36.3 % of bullied students reported that they notified a
teacher or some other adult at school. IMPLICATIONS?
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, “Student Reports of Bullying and CyberBullying: Results From the 2009 School Crime Supplement to the National Crime Victimization Survey” Web Tables (NCES 2011-336).
Specific Bullying Behaviors
Percent of students ages 12-18 who reported being bullied at
school during the 2008-2009 school year, by type of bullying
Made fun of, called names, or insulted
Subject of rumors
Pushed, shoved, tripped, or spit on
Threatened with harm
Excluded from activities on purpose
Tried to make them do something they
did not want to do
Property destroyed on purpose
Percentage of Students
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, “Student Reports of Bullying and CyberBullying: Results From the 2009 School Crime Supplement to the National Crime Victimization Survey” Web Tables (NCES 2011-336).
Incident Locations
Among students ages 12-18 who reported being
bullied at school during the 2008-2009 school year:
• 47.2 percent of students reported being
bullied in a hallway or stairwell.
• 33.6 percent of students reported being
bullied in a classroom.
Implications for school practitioners?
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, “Student Reports of Bullying and CyberBullying: Results From the 2009 School Crime Supplement to the National Crime Victimization Survey” Web Tables (NCES 2011-336).
Cyberbullying: Fear and Avoidance
A higher percentage of students ages 12-18 who reported being
cyber-bullied anywhere during the 2008-09 school year…
Avoided a
specific place
at school
Feared that
someone would
attack or harm them
at school or on the
way to/from school
Skipped school
during the 20082009 school year
Percentage of Students
What is the basic message in this data?
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, “Student Reports of Bullying and CyberBullying: Results From the 2009 School Crime Supplement to the National Crime Victimization Survey” Web Tables (NCES 2011-336).
Pew Research Center November, 2011 Report
Teens, Kindness and Cruelty on Social Network Sites
http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2011/Teens-and-social-media.aspx
15
Bullying Experiences of Particular Groups
• Student with disabilities tend to experience more bullying than
students without disabilities (verbal, physical, exclusion)
• 2009 GLSEN national school climate survey found:
• Nearly 9 out of 10 LGBT students (middle/high school)
experienced harassment at school in past year and nearly twothirds felt unsafe because of their sexual orientation.
• For 2008-2009 school year (age 12-18), bullied rates for
white/black (≈ 29%); Hispanic (≈ 25%); Asian (≈ 17%) [NCES]
• For 2008-2009 school year (age 12-18), rates of being bullied
29.5% for females versus 26.6% for males [NCES]
Consider Harmful Effects of Bullying
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
1.
Think about the 4 videos we have watched
2.
What are the short- and longer term issues with
respect to harm students experience?
3.
How serious is all of this?
Thinking About Harm to Students:
What Does the Evidence Say?
School Climate Matters: Psychological Well-Being
Long-term serious harm results from bullying and dayto-day experiences in a toxic school environment
(Arseneault et al., 2006; Bierman, 2004; Buhs, Ladd, & Herald, 2006; Cornell & Mayer, 2010; Juvonen, & Witkow, 2005; Ladd, 2003;
Mayer & Furlong, 2010; Nansel et al., 2001; Mayer, 2010; Schwartz, Gorman, Nakamoto, & Toblin, 2005)
School Climate Matters: Psychological Well-Being
• Being bullied and related victimization experiences
produce psychosocial adjustment problems such as:
• depression
• anxiety
• attentional problems
• social withdrawal
which in turn lead to school avoidance and reduced
motivation to engage in learning activities
(Arseneault et al., 2006; Bierman, 2004; Buhs, Ladd, & Herald, 2006; Cornell & Mayer, 2010; Juvonen, & Witkow, 2005; Ladd, 2003;
Mayer & Furlong, 2010; Nansel et al., 2001; Mayer, 2010; Schwartz, Gorman, Nakamoto, & Toblin, 2005)
School Climate Matters: Psychological Well-Being
Children who bully are at higher risk of subsequent
involvement in the criminal justice system and of
continuing bullying in adult life.
(Arseneault et al., 2006; Bierman, 2004; Buhs, Ladd, & Herald, 2006; Cornell & Mayer, 2010; Juvonen, & Witkow, 2005; Ladd, 2003;
Mayer & Furlong, 2010; Nansel et al., 2001; Mayer, 2010; Schwartz, Gorman, Nakamoto, & Toblin, 2005)
School Climate Matters: Analogy To Child Neglect
• Severe physical child abuse is analogous to school shooting
• Severe harm
• High profile and obvious
• Quick, visible systemic response
• Long-term child neglect is analogous to long-term bullying,
intimidation, and incivility in schools; toxic school environments
• Harm is real, substantial
• Not so obvious
• Marginal systemic response
• Long-term harassment, intimidation, and bullying in schools that
remain under addressed constitutes a form of systemic educational
neglect (Mayer & Furlong, 2010)
What About Your School?
Consider a situation where the adults at your
school tend to look the other way, feel that they
are too busy with other responsibilities, or for
other reasons, do not address bullying incidents.
If this occurred on an ongoing basis, do you think
the adults in your school would be engaging in a
form of child neglect? What are the issues here?
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
Some Elements of the
NJ Anti-Bullying Law
Some Elements of the NJ Anti-Bullying Law
HIB Definition
• HIB means any gesture, any written, verbal or physical act, or
any electronic communication, whether it be a single incident or
a series of incidents, that:
• Is reasonably perceived as being motivated either by an actual
or perceived characteristic, such as race, color, religion, ancestry,
national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity and
expression, or a mental, physical or sensory disability, or by any
other distinguishing characteristic;
•Takes place on school property, at any school-sponsored
function, or on a school bus; or off school grounds, as provided
for in N.J.S.A. 18A:37-15.3,
Some Elements of the NJ Anti-Bullying Law
HIB Definition (cont.)
• Substantially disrupts or interferes with the orderly operation
of the school or the rights of other students; and that
• A reasonable person should know, under the circumstances,
will have the effect of physically or emotionally harming a
student or damaging the student’s property, or placing a
student in reasonable fear of physical or emotional harm to his
person or damage to his property; or
• Has the effect of insulting or demeaning any student or group
of students; or
• Creates a hostile educational environment for the student by
interfering with a student’s education or by severely or
pervasively causing physical or emotional harm to the student.
Does the following video constitute
bullying per the NJ ABR definition?
Look at the boy’s behavior relative to
the girl and use of the sliding board .
Some Elements of the NJ Anti-Bullying Law
Key Groups and Individuals in the Process
• The school district chief school administrator (CSA) is
required to appoint a district anti-bullying coordinator
(ABC)
• Coordinating and strengthening the school district’s
policies to prevent, identify and address HIB of students;
• Collaborating with the School Anti-Bullying Specialists
in the school district, the BOE and the CSA to prevent,
identify and respond to HIB of students in the school
district; other duties
Some Elements of the NJ Anti-Bullying Law
Key Groups and Individuals in the Process
• The principal in each school is required to appoint a School
Anti-Bullying Specialist (ABS). The ABS must be a guidance
counselor; school psychologist; or other school employee
trained to be the ABS
• Responsibilities of the ABS include the following:
• Chairing the school safety team;
• Leading investigation of HIB incidents at school;
• Acting as the primary school official responsible for
preventing, identifying and addressing HIB incidents in the
school.
Some Elements of the NJ Anti-Bullying Law
Key Groups and Individuals in the Process
• School Safety Team – A school safety team (SST) must be
formed in each school. The SST needs to help facilitate a positive
school climate. The SST includes the principal or senior
administrative designee, teacher, ABS, parent of a student in the
school; and others determined by principal.
• SST responsibilities include:
• Receiving records of all complaints of HIB
• Receiving copies of all HIB investigation reports
• Identifying and addressing patterns of HIB in the school
• Reviewing and strengthening school climate and related
school policies to prevent HIB; Educating the community on
HIB; other duties
(Note: parent member has no access to confidential student
information from complaints, investigations, or other sources)
Some Elements of the NJ Anti-Bullying Law
Reporting Requirements
• Reported verbally to the principal on the same day when
the school employee or contracted service provider witnessed
or received reliable information regarding any such incident.
• Reported in writing within two days of the verbal report
(the day the incident was witnessed or information about the
incident was received).
• Procedure must include a provision permitting a person
to anonymously report an act of HIB; however, this must
not be construed to permit formal disciplinary action solely on
the basis of an anonymous report.
Some Elements of the NJ Anti-Bullying Law
Investigation Requirements
• Initiate investigation within 1 day of receiving report of
incident, conducted by a school anti-bullying specialist in
coordination with the principal.
• Investigation completed no later than 10 school days from
the date of the written report of the incident.
• Results of the investigation must be reported to the school
district’s chief school administrator (CSA) within two school
days of completion of the investigation.
BREAK
14 minutes and 59 seconds ☺
which means we begin again in exactly 15 minutes
Facilitated Table Sessions
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Challenge Question #1: 5-minute table breakout and share
Choose one table member as discussion facilitator and one
as note taker to report back to the group
A school can be highly successful in its efforts to prevent HIB
if its primary approach and main thrust involves buying a
commercial bullying prevention program, training school
personnel, and implementing the program as designed.
Identify what you see as the main issues in a school’s
approach to preventing HIB and to what extent you agree or
disagree with the statement above (and why).
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Challenge Question #2: 5-minute table breakout and share
Choose one table member as discussion facilitator and one
as note taker to report back to the group
A school can be highly successful in its efforts to prevent HIB
if it relies on the overall general input from administrators,
teachers, other staff, students, and parents, without any formal
survey-based approach to collecting data on school climate
and student victimization experiences.
Identify what you see as the main issues in a school’s
approach to using data to help prevent HIB and to what extent
you agree or disagree with the statement above (and why).
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Challenge Question #3: 5-minute table breakout and share
Choose one table member as discussion facilitator and one
as note taker to report back to the group
A school can be highly successful in its efforts to prevent HIB
without too much attention in its various prevention
approaches and activities to HIB bystander behaviors.
Identify what you see as the main issues in a school’s
approach to prevent HIB with respect to bystander behaviors
and to what extent you agree or disagree with the statement
above (and why).
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Challenge Question #4: 5-minute table breakout and share
Choose one table member as discussion facilitator and one
as note taker to report back to the group
A school can be highly successful in its efforts to prevent HIB
if it just focuses its attention to what happens at school, with
no regard for larger neighborhood and community issues.
Identify what you believe to be the main issues in a school’s
approach to prevent HIB and to what extent you agree or
disagree with the statement above in italics.
Working Lunch
Complete Assessment #1
Best Practices From the Bullying Research Base
(we’ll consider a few of these in detail-bold items)
• Changing school climate
• Assessing climate/bullying/victimization
• Training all staff
• School anti-bullying advisory team
• Actively including staff, parents, and students
• Disseminate clear rules and consequences
• Increase adult supervision
• Provide consistent individual intervention
• Allow class time to focus on Social Emotional Learning (SEL)
• Sustain efforts annually
Reproduced with text editing from Figure 4.1 in Bullying Prevention & Intervention: Realistic Strategies for
Schools. Swearer & Espelage (2009). Guilford
Some Specific Approaches
Schools Can Take
Changing School Climate
(adapted slide content courtesy of Stuart Green, NJ Coalition for Bullying Awareness and Prevention)
• Emphasize warmth, engagement, inclusion, community
• Positive relations and shared understanding between staff
• Positive staff-student interactions
• Support/inclusion for all (diverse clubs/activities; increase
support for vulnerable groups)
• Character education /social-emotional learning/ ‘universal’
social skills training
• Clear/consensus expectations ('how we do things here')
Changing School Climate
(adapted slide content courtesy of Stuart Green, NJ Coalition for Bullying Awareness and Prevention)
• Emphasize warmth, engagement, inclusion, community
Discuss at your table some specific ways you might
emphasize warmth, engagement, inclusion, and
community in your school.
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
Consider Adult-Adult Interactions
53
• Students often model behaviors they observe among adults
(Bandura, 1969, 1986; Kazdin, 1978)
• Can students be expected to regularly engage each other in a
friendly and supportive manner if they don't see this
happening between adults at school?
(Kasen et al., 2004; Swearer et al, 2010)
• At a recent school professional development session, I asked
counselors, teachers and administrators how many in the audience
had schools where 90% + of the adult-adult interactions the
students observed every day were friendly and positive exchanges
• NO HANDS WERE RAISED!
• About half of the hands were raised when I lowered the
percentage to about 60-70% IMPLICATIONS?
54
Consider Teacher-Student Interactions
Key Findings from the Empirical Research Base
• Teacher-student interactions set the stage for school climate
• Academic situations
• Routine behavioral problems
• Indirect influence on bullying/other problem behaviors
• Teachers are models for student behaviors
• If teachers are viewed as unreasonable or even mean,
students may mimic what they see
What was going on here?
What did the students learn?
How should the teacher have behaved?
What was going on here?
What did the students learn?
How should the teacher have behaved?
What was going on here?
What did the students learn?
How should the teacher have behaved?
Changing School Climate
(adapted slide content courtesy of Stuart Green, NJ Coalition for Bullying Awareness and Prevention)
School-Wide:
• Administrative support
• Coordinating group/staff discussions/training
• Assessment (surveys, [real] reporting system)
• Proactive effort to identify all incidents/relationships
• Supervise high-risk areas (schoolyard, lunchroom, school
bus, team activities, locker room, cyberspace)
• Consistent rules and sanctions (staff consensus)
(well-known to students, staff, parents, community)
• Involve parents
• Activate peer bystanders
Changing School Climate
(adapted slide content courtesy of Stuart Green, NJ Coalition for Bullying Awareness and Prevention)
Classroom
• Clear, consistent rules
• Regular meetings
• Collaborative learning
• Curriculum integration with HIB prevention
• Proactive work on relationships
• Parent involvement
Changing School Climate
(adapted slide content courtesy of Stuart Green, NJ Coalition for Bullying Awareness and Prevention)
Classroom
• Clear, consistent rules
Discuss at your table how having variable systems of rules
between different classrooms within the same school might
impact HIB prevention efforts.
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
Changing School Climate
(adapted slide content courtesy of Stuart Green, NJ Coalition for Bullying Awareness and Prevention)
Individual
• Proactive information-gathering on vulnerability & relations
• Meeting with each child who was bullied and call/see parent
(apologize, take responsibility, absolve-don’t allow blaming victim)
• Meeting with each child who bullied and call parent
• Consequences for the bullying child (reasonable, invariable,
escalating), then (post-incident) reflection/empathy
• Assure and arrange increased support for the bullied child
• Active monitoring after incidents.
Changing School Climate
(adapted slide content courtesy of Stuart Green, NJ Coalition for Bullying Awareness and Prevention)
Individual
• Assure and arrange increased support for the bullied child
Discuss at your table some specific ways you might provide
support for a child who has experienced repeated bullying.
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
It all adds up
So don’t ignore HIB!
Focus seriously on bystander behaviors
Slide Source: NJDOE
What do you see as the realistic limits and
related trade-offs in your ability to address
bystander behavior issues at multiple
levels in the school
(schoolwide, classroom, individual level)?
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
Considerations in
Addressing Cyberbullying
What Do We Know About Cyberbullying?
• Variable estimates of U.S. offending and victimization
• Nationally representative sample of 2,051 adolescents (ages, 10-17) as
part of the National Survey of Children’s Exposure to Violence (2008)
• 6% reported a past-year and 9% lifetime online victimization, and
96% of those reported offline victimization, mainly sexual in nature
• Online victims also reported elevated rates of trauma
symptomatology, delinquency, and life adversity. (Mitchell et al.,
2011)
• Review of 7 studies 2004-2010 found lifetime cyberbullying
victimization rates for youth of ≈ 20-40% (Hinduja & Patchin, 2010)
Slide Source: NJDOE
Slide Source: NJDOE
What do you see as the realistic limits
and related trade-offs in your ability to
address cyberbullying issues at
multiple levels in the school
(schoolwide, classroom, individual
level)?
2-minute Table Breakout & Share
Adult Supervision Issues
Adult Supervision Issues
• Where are teachers and other school staff when students are
in the hallways?
• How are teachers positioned at recess outside?
• Are locker rooms and other areas left unlocked and
unsupervised before, during, after school?
• Are there accessible/unlocked areas in and around the school
where students are particularly vulnerable to victimization?
• What are the flow patterns for people and places? Might
they promote conflict?
Let’s hear from a few people as to what they have
experienced in schools.
Consider that while we are doing
many things in the school to
promote improvements,
sometimes our good work can
begin to unravel if we don’t pay
attention to some important areas.
83
Teachers Using Students as Models
for Academic and SocialEmotional-Behavioral Change
84
Key Findings from the Empirical Research Base
• Research on modeling effects tells us that there are two
particularly important requirements for effective modeling:
(Bandura, 1969, 1986; Kazdin, 1978; Kendall, 2006; Meichenbaum, 1977)
• The observer must identify with the model
• The model must demonstrate the struggle to succeed,
modeling thinking, coping, and adaptation towards success
• We often drop the ball in these two areas
• Using “teacher’s pet” as models
• Quickly and effortlessly running through the skill
85
Teachers/Staff Having the Same
Prevention Training as the Students
86
• We sometimes provide anger management, social skills, and other
prevention programs to at-risk students. But do the adults in the school
receive the same complete training that these students receive?
• If not, what are the potential results?
• Teachers/staff don’t know what the students are learning
• Adults will not understand where and when the critical teachable
moments occur when students desperately need cues/prompts to
utilize newly learned skills
• Teachers will not realize that they need to make time for students to
use these emerging skills in authentic situations at school
• Students with serious problems will be less likely to improve and
school-wide problems will continue unabated
87
Addressing Aspects of the HIB Law:
• Differentiating normal conflict from HIB
• Differentiating HIB from rough & tumble play
Slide Source: NJDOE
Differentiating Rough & Tumble Play from HIB
(Reproduced from: http://www.cfchildren.org/media/files/str_research_foundations.pdf
• Positive and neutral facial expressions are more typical of rough-andtumble play, while negative facial expressions characterize aggression
• Children are free to choose to participate in rough-and-tumble play, but
they are often forced or challenged to participate in aggression
• Children tend not to use full force in rough-and-tumble play, whereas
full force is often seen in aggression
• Children are more likely to alternate roles (for example, chased and
chaser) in rough-and-tumble play, while aggression generally involves
unilateral roles
• Children tend to stay together after a bout of play fighting, but they
often separate following aggression
Differentiating roughand-tumble play, real
fighting, and bullying
Olweus Bullying
Prevention Program
http://www.windsorcsd.org/Bullying%20Pr
evention%20Form/simil
arities%20and%20differ
ences.pdf
Danger Will Robinson!
Things to Avoid or Handle with Caution
Using Peer Mediation and other Conflict Resolution Approaches
It is inadvisable to use peer mediation to address bullying incidents:
• Children who are bullied can be traumatized by such engagement with
the peers who harmed them
• Bullied children may be subjected to further bullying as a result
• Conflict resolution miscontrues bullying as peer conflict rather than a
type of personal assault.
• Peer mediation often sends a message that each person is partly right
and partly wrong—inappropriate for bullying
• Apart from HIB, conflict resolution (lacking a strong evidence base)
can be prudently used for mild forms of conflict and to promote social
problem solving
Current Zero Tolerance Discipline Practices
Lack Scientific Support
Zero tolerance is not effective. Suspension is associated
with poorer student outcomes.
Conclusions Regarding Punishment Based Approaches
• Punishment can be used, but should be coupled with methods to teach
and reinforce desired prosocial behaviors
• Punishment should comprise a significantly lesser proportion of the
corrective approach
• Punishment should be proportional to the offense and surrounding
context, and where possible, involve some form of restitution
• Where possible, punishment should logically link to the offense
• Suspension (and expulsion) are last resort procedures because they
have little desired effect and generally make things worse
• Punishment must be fair and consistent, which the entire school
community must fully understand
Iatrogenic Effects of Interventions for Youth w/ Anti-Social Behaviors
• It is common to group students with anti-social behaviors together in
anger management, social skills, and similar intervention classes
• Research demonstrates that in most cases, these students reinforce
each other’s negative beliefs and attitudes, greatly diminishing
intervention effects, sometimes making things worse
• It can be more effective to develop partially heterogeneous
intervention groups that include some less at-risk participants
• Such groups require highly trained and experienced group
facilitators to help minimize these iatrogenic effects
• In addition to participating in interventions, youth with anti-social
behaviors can benefit from activities with more pro-social youth,
suggesting that schools need to promote such opportunities
BREAK
14 minutes and 59 seconds ☺
which means we begin again in exactly 15 minutes
Facilitated Table Sessions
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Challenge Question #1: 10-minute table breakout and
share
Choose one table member as discussion facilitator and one
as note taker to report back to the group
If your table comprised the school safety team at your school,
what basic approaches and steps would you take to:
• understand your school’s climate
• understand the nature of HIB in your school
• facilitate a positive school climate
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Challenge Question #2: 5-minute table breakout and share
Choose one table member as discussion facilitator and one
as note taker to report back to the group
If your table comprised the school safety team at your school,
what basic approaches and steps would you take to fully
address bystander behavior issues related to HIB prevention at
your school?
Approaches to Prevent Bullying
Challenge Question #3: 5-minute table breakout and share
Choose one table member as discussion facilitator and one
as note taker to report back to the group
If your table comprised the school safety team at your school,
what basic approaches and steps would you take to fully
address HIB prevention regarding sexual orientation issues
and the LGBT community of students in your school?
Assessment #2
(15 minutes)
Closing Session
15-minute summary of takeaway points
followed by 20-minutes Q&A discussion
Takeaway Points
• Bullying/other forms of HIB are pervasive in schools
• 6th-graders are at highest risk among 2ndary students
• Harm from HIB is real, quite serious, and long-term
• Cyberbullying constitutes a serious aspect of HIB
• Harmful effects of victimization experiences add up
Takeaway Points
• Effective prevention is multifaceted
• It involves having the all stakeholders “on board”
• Fostering positive school climate is a central concern
• Some commercial prevention packages can help but
should not be the main thrust of the school’s efforts
• Punishment does not work as a primary approach
• Don’t use peer mediation for HIB incidents
Takeaway Points
• Addressing bystander behaviors should be a high
priority part of HIB prevention efforts
• Schools should take a close look at the quality of
existing adult-adult, and adult-students relationships
that exist on a day-to-day basis in the school
• In order to develop plans that have a good chance of
success, schools need to systematically collect and
analyze data on school climate and student
victimization experiences (includes student surveys)
Q & A Discussion
Thank You!
Remember to sign the
end of day attendance sheet