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The www.bullying.org Web site provides victims of bullying with a resource most don't have in their own lives: someone to talk to. In the I Want to Share section of the site, victims of bullying from around the world have the opportunity to express their thoughts, feelings, and frustrations in the form of essays, poems, drawings, photos, and films. "That section alone has really made a difference in the lives of many kids," Belsey said. "We have more than 1,000 visitors a week. One young person who shared her story, wrote us again to tell us that the first time she wrote, she was thinking of taking her own life. But after sharing her story with others on the Web site, she was feeling more in control." FINDING A SOLUTION
"I started out believing what my parents said, 'You're a beautiful girl, and no one can ever change that.' The truth is, as I've learned it, people can change it, at least, they can change the way you think about your own beauty. Five years ago, I looked in the mirror and saw a bright, cheery, happy, beautiful nine-year-old. Now I look in the mirror and see a fat, depressed 14-year-old, all thanks to them: the bullies. You know who you are. I'm not going to let you win."
Of course, simply having someone to talk to doesn't solve the problem of bullying. According to Olweus, bullying will not end without aggressive, effective intervention on the part of adults and an attitude of nonacceptance of bullying on the part of other students. "There's no magic bullet that will stop bullying," Olweus points out. "Every member of the school community must work systematically to eliminate the problem." Often, however, parents, teachers, and concerned students don't know how to help or where to find the resources available to them. The I Want to Help section of the Banded Peak site addresses that issue as well, providing a list of informational resources, agencies, and links to Web sites about techniques and programs that deal with bullying. The page includes educational resources, media coverage about bullying and teasing, research on bullying and teasing, options to bullying, and links to bullying-related Web sites. It also contains a moving audio message from Reverend Dale Lang, the father of Taber victim Jason Lang. AN ONGOING EFFORTThe www.bullying.org Web site was created by student members of the Community NET-Workers Project at Banded Peak. The project involves students in creating Web sites for local nonprofit groups. For this Web site, Belsey noted, students in grades 1 through 3 contributed the drawings. Boys and girls in grades 4 through 7 did the research and writing. And two eighth graders hard-coded the html and created the main graphics using a digital image composer. In addition to the Help and Sharing pages, www.bullying.org includes information about the site's history, including news accounts of the Taber shootings, and comments about the site from visitors from around the world. The site is far from finished, however. According to Belsey, "The students are now soliciting submissions from celebrities. Celebrities have tremendous influence over young people, and each of them has a story to tell and lessons to teach about the hurdles they have had to overcome." According to Olweus, bullying -- especially in its most severe forms -- has increased in our schools in recent years. To escape the bullying, Olweus notes, victims frequently avoid school and social interaction. Some resort to violence against others or themselves, but even those who don't kill or attempt suicide often experience lifelong psychological problems that interfere with their academic, social, and emotional development. And those who are bullied are not the only victims. The bullies themselves tend to become aggressive adults with a much greater risk of participating in criminal activity. Even those children who are neither bullies nor victims, those who witness the bullying, suffer from fear and anxiety and from being in a learning environment poisoned by bullying. "More and more people," Belsey said, "are realizing that bullying is not simply a rite of childhood that has to be somehow endured or ignored. It is clear that we do so at our own peril." -- And at the peril of our children. Editor's Note: All the student quotes in this article were obtained at the Web site created by students at Banded Peak School in Bragg Creek, Alberta, Canada. ADDITIONAL EDUCATION WORLD STORIES OF INTEREST
Ten Web Sites for Exploring Conflict Resolution in the Classroom
One Character Education Program That Works!
Is Character Education the Answer?
Teaching Citizenship's Five Themes
Linda Starr
Last updated 04/30/2009
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