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Law/ Cyberbullying for Secondary Students - Coggle Diagram
Law/ Cyberbullying for Secondary Students
Important links
Kids Helpline: kidshelpline.com.au
eHeadspace: headspace.org.au/eheadspace
eSafety young people: esafety.gov.au/young-people
Bullying. No Way!: bullyingnoway.gov.au
Youth Law Australia yla.org.au
Who can you speak to:
A trusted person
Student: Principal or teacher
eHeadspace
Kids Helpline
the Police
The eSaftey team
Definition: Cyberbullying is when someone, typically a teenager, bullies or harasses others on the internet and other digital spaces, particularly on social media sites.
Types of Cyberbullying
Social Media: Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat & Tik Tok
Text messaging/social media apps
Instant messaging: online chatting
Email
Online gaming communities
Online forums, chatrooms, message boards - Reddit
What it looks like/feels like:
repeatedly hurt physically, or verbally through abusive texts, emails, images, videos, or nasty gossip and chat
excluded or ignored
tricked or humiliated by fake accounts.
How to report cyberbullying:
Report and block: Send a report to the platform it occurred upon
Make a complaint to the eSaftey Commissioner. If you're under 18, and the service doesn't send a response in 48 hours, if you deem it to the threatening, humiliating or harassing, make a lodge.
Keep a record: Take screenshots and records
Frequency of bullying: "The 2017 School Crime Supplement to the National Crime Victimization Survey (National Center for Education Statistics and Bureau of Justice) indicates that, among students ages 12-18 who reported being bullied at school during the school year, 15% were bullied online or by text."
How to address:
Increase digital awareness to gain grater understanding
Role model, reinforce positive behaviours to students
Speak to their parent, act as a facilitator
Speak to them in private