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Published byAron Sherman Modified over 9 years ago
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One Voice Bullying Prevention School Climate Primary Prevention Presented by Brian Koenig, M.S. www.k12associates.com K12 Associates, LLC Copyright 2013
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Bullying Prevention Since Columbine 1999 Tragedy Prompted a National Focus Since Then Hundreds of New Programs and Products Still No Clear Model to Prevent Bullying Families, Students and Community Members Expect More Than a Partial Solution Schools and Students At Risk Legal Wasted Teaching Time Student Torment and Sometimes Tragedy
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Why So Little Progress? Most Bullying Goes Unseen by Adults Tough to Intervene Kids are More Influenced by Other Kids Best Practices Out-the-Window in Real Life Drama Students Don’t Trust Adult Intervention Lack of Reporting Structures at School are Bullying “Friendly” Bus rides, playgrounds, hallways, locker rooms Adults Preach One Approach, Practice Another Unintentionally Ignore Bullying or Bully
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Current Prevention Strategies Inherently Limiting Students Motivated by Self Interest Safety Friendships Status Bullying Prevention Skills, Nice But Not Necessary Training of Students Uneven Maintenance Equally Uneven
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Powerful Bullying Influences Too Much For Students to Fix
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Two Simple Goals Most Bullying Prevention Focuses on Student Attitudes and Behavior But Design of the School Day Overpowers Student Skills Two Simple Goals Reduce the number of situations where students alone make the rules. Change the circumstances so positive behavior is the easiest choice.
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New Mindset Current Mindset Stuff happens at school. Kids need to learn how to avoid bullies, intervene in bullying incidents, stay away from unsafe places. This is the nature of school. New Mindset Anything unsafe about school we must do our best to change. Adults create the school climate not kids.
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Keeping School Safe What Adults Must Do Social Emotional Skill Building Model Behaviors Keep a Safe Physical Environment
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Unsafe Places Most Bullying Occurs Here Student Managed Space – Recipe for Trouble Low/no supervision Scarce resource No guided activity (nothing to do) Waiting Examples School bus seating Lunchroom seating Isolated areas on the playground Lining up
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Keeping Spaces Safe Environmental Assessment Observation and report Paraprofessional and bus driver focus groups Student focus groups Improve opportunities for student reporting More supervision Be intentional about personal space Less crowding Less waiting More guided activity and structure
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Modeling Positive Behavior Motto: Kids do what we do, not what we tell them. Positive problem solving language for adults What do my comments communicate to the student My language during conflict Scripted comments that de-escalate trouble Discuss age appropriate feedback for students Build self awareness of adult responses to conflict
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Student Social Emotional Skills Problem solving strategies during conflict Role playing in the classroom Strategies to ward off bullying behavior Meshes with Conscious Discipline (Becky Bailey) strategy, only with youth not adults. Resource: Second Step Bullying Prevention by the Committee for Children
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