Cyberbullying
Cyberbullying
Cyberbullying
The 21st-century bully doesn't hang out on the street corners looking
to shake kids down for their lunch money
The 21st-century bully doesn't hang out on the street corners looking
to shake kids down for their lunch money
How is Cyberbullying Different from Traditional Bullying?
Victims often dont know who the bully is or why they are targeted
Viral large number of people can find out about it very quickly
Can be done from a distance and the bully doesnt have to see the
persons response (impersonal)
Many adults dont have technical skills to monitor or respond
This has caused adults to be slow to respond which, in turn, gives the
cyberbullying the belief that there are little to no consequences
What is Cyberbullying?
Cyberbullying is the use of e-mail, instant messaging, chat rooms,
pagers, cell phones, or other forms of information technology to
deliberately harass, threaten, or intimidate someone
The problem is compounded by the fact that a bully can hide behind
an electronic veil, disguising his or her true identity
This makes it difficult to trace the source, and encourages bullies to
behave more aggressively than they might face-to-face
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Types of Cyberbullying
According to Nancy Willard, author of Cyber-Safe Kids and Cyber1.
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Flaming
Online fights using electronic messages with angry and vulgar
language
Harassment
Repeatedly sending offensive, rude and insulting messages
Denigration
Dissing someone online. Sending or posting cruel gossip or rumors
about a person to damage his/her reputation or friendships
Impersonation
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1. Power Hungry
2. Retaliating Victim
3. Mean Girl
4. Vengeful Angel
5. Inadvertent Cyberbully
1. Power Hungry
Seeks attention from peers
Maintains control by intimidating victim
2. Retaliating victim
Was cyberbullied or bullied in the past
Seeks revenge on bullies
Maybe less popular, but usually have above average computer skills
3. Mean Girl
Bullies for entertainment value and to alleviate boredom (i.e. @
slumber party)
Aims to increase her own popularity by putting others down.
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Vengeful Angel
Seeks revenge in behalf of those who have been bullied
Aims to protect friends
Doesnt see themselves as cyberbully
5. Inadvertent Cyberbully
Uses internet carelessly without considering potential impact on
others.
Does not intentionally hurt others
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3. Exploration of Identity
Social networking profile becomes vehicle to present emerging selfimage, which includes sexuality
Teens are using social networking as vehicle to establish their place
within their social community
4. Online Social Norms
Everybody does it
What happens online, stays online
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Cyberbullying Insight
Material, text or images, may be posted on personal web pages,
blogs, transmitted via email, discussion groups. message boards,
chat, IM, or cell phones
A significant amount occurs off-campus but impacts students oncampus
Students could be using schools internet system or personal cell
phones to engage in cyberbullying
According to 2006 survey conducted by Fight Crime, a non-profit
organization:
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online
2. 45% of children and 30% of teens said cyberbullying occurred at
school
Personal Relationships
Harassment in the context of flirting
Relationship break-ups
Online fights about relationships
Recognition
School officials must recognize that what initially appears to be an
online threat could be any of the following:
1. A joke, parody, or game
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Responding to Cyberbullying
1. Save evidence emails, IM, blogs, web pages (print out all instances
+ dont delete any messages received)
2. Try to identify cyberbully, if possible
3. Ignore block or delete them
4. Calmly and strongly tell them to stop
5. Stop or remove material contact ISP, website, etc.
6. Contact parents of cyberbully
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7. Contact school
8. Contact police
The school should contact or help the parent contact LE when the
following is occurring:
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Resources:
www.commonsense.com
www.cyberbully.org
www.isafe.org
www.wiredsafety.org
www.stoptextbully.com
www.haltabuse.org
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