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Overview of Bullying - Coggle Diagram
Overview of Bullying
Types
Verbal- teasing, name-calling, sexual comments, taunting, threats of harm
Social- excluding someone on purpose, telling others not to be friends with someone, spreading rumors, embarrassing someone in public
Physical- hitting, kicking, punching; spitting; tripping, pushing; taking or breaking someone's possessions; rude hand gestures
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Helping Young Adults
Bullying in high school and college is often labeled as hazing, harassment, stalking
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Definition
Repeated, imbalance of power (physical strength, popularity, access to information, etc.) to control or harm others
Unwanted, aggressive behavior among school aged children
Setting
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School building, playground, bus, travel to and from school, neighborhoods, Internet
Helping Young Children
Teach and model appropriate, positive, friendly interactions with others; Set clear rules for behavior; Use age-appropriate consequences and help them learn consequences of actions; Encourage them to report wrong behaviors
Statistics
28% of students in grades 6-12 experienced bullying (2010-2011)
20% of students in grades 9-12 experienced bullying (2013)