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The
section bellow was taken from
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
on (28-01-2008) and will be updated regularly to add any changes,
modifications, or updates.
Bullying is the act of
intentionally causing harm to others through verbal harassment, physical
assault, or other more subtle methods of coercion such as manipulation.
Bullying can be determined in many different ways Although the UK
currently has no legal definition of bullying,
[1] some US states have laws
against it. [2]
In colloquial speech, bullying often
describes a form of harassment perpetrated by an abuser who possesses
more physical and/or social power and dominance than the victim. The
victim of bullying is sometimes referred to as a target. The harassment
can be verbal, physical and/or emotional.
Many programs have been started to
prevent bullying at schools with promotional speakers.
Norwegian researcher Dan Olweus
defines bullying as when a person is "exposed, repeatedly and over time,
to negative actions on the part of one or more other persons." He
defines negative action as "when a person intentionally inflicts injury
or discomfort upon another person, through physical contact, through
words or in other ways."[3]
Bullying can occur in any setting where
human beings interact with each other. This includes school, the
workplace, home and neighborhoods. Bullying can exist between social
groups, social classes and even between countries (see Jingoism).
Bullying
behavior
Bullying is an act of repeated
aggressive behavior in order to intentionally hurt another person.
Bullying is characterized by an individual behaving in a certain way to
gain power over another person (Besag, 1989). Behaviors may include name
calling, verbal or written abuse, exclusion from activities, exclusion
from social situations, physical abuse, or coercion (Carey, 2003;
Whitted & Dupper, 2005). Bullies may behave this way to be perceived as
popular or tough or to get attention. They may bully out of jealousy or
be acting out because they themselves are bullied (Crothers & Levinson,
2004).
USA National Center for Education
Statistics suggests that bullying can be broken into two categories:
Direct bullying, and indirect bullying which is also known as social
aggression.[4]
Ross states that direct bullying
involves a great deal of physical aggression such as shoving and poking,
throwing things, slapping, choking, punching and kicking, beating,
stabbing, pulling hair, scratching, biting and scraping.[5]
He also suggests that social aggression
or indirect bullying is characterized by threatening the victim into
social isolation. This isolation is achieved through a wide variety of
techniques, including spreading gossip, refusing to socialize with the
victim, bullying other people who wish to socialize with the victim, and
criticizing the victim's manner of dress and other socially-significant
markers (including the victim's race, religion, disability, etc). Ross
(1998)[5] outlines other
forms of indirect bullying which are more subtle and more likely to be
verbal, such as name calling, the silent treatment, arguing others into
submission, manipulation, gossip/ false gossip, lies, rumors/ false
rumors, staring, giggling, laughing at the victim, saying certain words
that trigger a reaction from a past event, and mocking. Children's
charity Act Against Bullying was set up in 2003 to help children who
were victims of this type of bullying by researching and publishing
coping skills.
Effects
The effects of bullying can be
serious and even fatal. Mona O’Moore Ph. D of the Anti-Bullying Centre,
Trinity College Dublin, said, "There is a growing body of research which
indicates that individuals, whether child or adult who are persistently
subjected to abusive behavior are at risk of stress related illness
which can sometimes lead to suicide".[6]
Victims of bullying can suffer
from long term emotional and behavioral problems. Bullying can cause
loneliness, depression, anxiety, lead to low self-esteem and increased
susceptibility to illness.[7]
The National Conference of State
Legislatures said:
- "In 2002, a report released
by the U.S. Secret Service concluded that bullying played a
significant role in many school shootings and that efforts should be
made to eliminate bullying behavior."
[8]
Characteristics of bullies
Research indicates that adults
who bully have personalities that are authoritarian, combined with a
strong need to control or dominate.[9]
It has also been suggested that a deficit in social skills and a
prejudicial view of subordinates can be particular risk factors.[10]
Further studies have shown that
while envy and resentment may be motives for bullying,[11]
there is little evidence to suggest that bullies suffer from any deficit
in self esteem (as this would make it difficult to bully).[12]
Researchers have identified other
risk factors such as quickness to anger and use of force, addiction to
aggressive behaviors, mistaking others' actions as hostile, concern with
preserving self image, and engaging in obsessive or rigid actions.[13]
Bullying may also be "tradition" in
settings where an age group or higher rank feels superior than
lowerclassmen.
It is often suggested that bullying
behavior has its origin in childhood:
- "If aggressive behaviour is
not challenged in childhood, there is a danger that it may become
habitual. Indeed, there is research evidence, to indicate that
bullying during childhood puts children at risk of criminal
behaviour and domestic violence in adulthood."[6]
Bullying does not necessarily involve
criminality or physical violence. For example, bullying often operates
through psychological abuse or verbal abuse.
Bullying can often be associated with
street gangs, especially at school.
History of
bullying
High-level forms of violence such as
assault and murder usually receive most media attention, but lower-level
forms of violence such as bullying, has only in recent years started to
be addressed by researchers, educators, parents and legislators (Whitted
& Dupper, 2005).
It is only in recent years that
bullying has been recognised and recorded as a separate and distinct
offence, but there have been well documented cases the were recorded in
a different context. The Fifth Volume of the Newgate Calendar
[14] contains at least one
example where Eton Scholars George Alexander Wood and Alexander
Wellesley Leith were charged, at Aylesbury Assizes, with killing and
slaying the Hon. F. Ashley Cooper on February 28, 1825 in an incident
that would now, surely be described as "lethal hazing"[15].
The Newgate calendar contains several other examples that, while not as
distinct, could be considered indicative of situations of bullying.
Types of
bullying
School
bullying
-
Main article: School bullying
In schools, bullying usually
occurs in areas with minimal or no adult supervision. It can occur in
nearly any part in or around the school building, though it more often
occurs in PE, recess, hallways, bathrooms, on school buses and waiting
for buses, classes that require group work and/or after school
activities. Bullying in school sometimes consists of a group of students
taking advantage of, or isolating one student in particular and gaining
the loyalty of bystanders who want to avoid becoming the next victim.
Targets of bullying in school are often pupils who are considered
strange or different by their peers to begin with, making the situation
harder for them to deal with. Some children bully because they have been
isolated, and they have a deep need for belonging, but they do not
possess the social skills to effectively keep friends (see social
rejection).[7]
Bullying can also be perpetrated
by teachers and the school system itself: there is an inherent power
differential in the system that can easily predispose to subtle or
covert abuse, humiliation, or exclusion - even while maintaining overt
commitments to anti-bullying policies.[16][17]
School shootings receive an
enormous amount of media attention. The children who perpetrate these
shootings sometimes claim that they were victims of bullying and that
they resorted to violence only after the school administration
repeatedly failed to intervene.[8]
In many of these cases, the victims of the shooters sued both the
shooters' families and the schools.[18]
Some suggest these rare but
horrific events have led schools to try harder to discourage bullying,
with programs designed to teach students cooperation, as well as
training peer moderators in intervention and dispute resolution
techniques, as a form of peer support.[citation
needed]
American victims and their families
have legal recourse, such as suing a school or teacher for failure to
adequately supervise, racial or gender discrimination, or other civil
rights violations. Special education students who are victimized may sue
a school or school board under the ADA or Section 504.
Workplace
bullying
-
Main article: Workplace bullying
According to the Workplace Bullying and
Trauma Institute workplace bullying is "repeated, health-harming
mistreatment, verbal abuse, or conduct which is threatening,
humiliating, intimidating, or sabotage that interferes with work or some
combination of the three."[19].
Statistics show that bullying is 3 times as prevalent as illegal
discrimination and at least 1,600 times as prevalent as workplace
violence. Statistics also show that while only one employee in every
10,000 becomes a victim of workplace violence, one in six experiences
bullying at work. Bullying is also far more common than sexual
harassment and verbal abuse.
Unlike the more physical form of
schoolyard bullying, workplace bullying often takes place within the
established rules and policies of the organization and society. Such
actions are not necessarily illegal and may not even be against the
firm's regulations; however, the damage to the targeted employee and to
workplace morale is obvious.
Particularly when perpetrated by a
group, workplace bullying is sometimes known as mobbing.
Cyber-bullying
-
Main article: Cyber-bullying
According to Canadian educator Bill
Belsey, it:
...involves the use of information
and communication technologies such as e-mail, cell phone and
pager text messages, instant messaging, defamatory personal Web
sites, blogs, online games and defamatory online personal
polling Web sites, to support deliberate, repeated, and hostile
behaviour by an individual or group, that is intended to harm
others.
—Cyberbullying:
An Emerging Threat to the Always On Generation[20]
Bullies will even create blogs to
intimidate victims worldwide.[21]
Political
bullying
-
Main article: Jingoism
Jingoism occurs when one country
imposes its will on another. This is normally done with military force
or threats. With threats, it is common to ensure that aid and grants
will not be given to the smaller country or that the smaller country
will not be allowed to join a trading organization. Often political
corruptions, coup d'états, and kleptocracies are the solution and
response to the countries being bullied.[citation
needed]
Military
bullying
In 2000, the UK Ministry of
Defence (MOD) defined bullying as: “...the use of physical strength or
the abuse of authority to intimidate or victimize others, or to give
unlawful punishments.”[22]
A review of a number of deaths by suicide at Princess Royal Barracks,
Deepcut by Nicholas Blake QC indicated that whilst a culture of bullying
existed during the mid to late 1990s many of the issues were being
addressed as a result of the Defence Training Review.[23]
Some argue that this behaviour
should be allowed because of a general academic consensus that
"soldiering" is different from other occupations. Soldiers expected to
risk their lives should, according to them, develop strength of body and
spirit to accept bullying.[24]
In some countries, ritual hazing among
recruits has been tolerated and even lauded as a rite of passage that
builds character and toughness; while in others, systematic bullying of
lower-ranking, young or physically slight recruits may in fact be
encouraged by military policy, either tacitly or overtly (see
dedovschina). Also, the Russian army usually have older/more experienced
candidates abusing - kicking or punching - less experienced soldiers.[25].
Hazing
-
Main articles: Hazing and Ragging
Hazing is an often ritualistic test,
which may constitute harassment, abuse or humiliation with requirements
to perform meaningless tasks; sometimes as a way of initiation into a
social group. The term can refer to either physical (sometimes violent)
or mental (possibly degrading) practices. It is a subjective matter
where to draw to line between 'normal' hazing (somewhat abusive) and a
mere rite of passage (essentially bonding; proponents may argue they can
coincide), and there is a gray area where exactly the other side passes
over into sheer degrading, even harmful abuse that should not even be
tolerated if accepted voluntarily (serious but avoidable accidents do
still happen; even deliberate abuse with similar grave medical
consequences occurs, in some traditions even rather often). Furthermore,
as it must be a ritual initiation, a different social context may mean a
same treatment is technically hazing for some, not for others, e.g. a
line-crossing ceremony when passing the equator at sea is hazing for the
sailor while the extended (generally voluntary, more playful)
application to passengers is not.
Hazing has been reported in a variety
of social contexts, including:
- Sports teams
- Academic fraternities and
sororities (see fraternities and sororities)These practices are not
limited to American schools. Swedish students undergo a similar
bonding period, known as nollningen, in which all members of the
entering class participate.
- College and universities in
general.
- Associated groups, like fan clubs,
school bands
- Secret societies and even certain
service clubs, or rather their local sections (such as some modern
US Freemasons; not traditional masonic lodges)
- Similarly various other
competitive sports teams or clubs, even 'soft' and non-competitive
ones (such as arts)
- The armed forces — e.g., in the
U.S., hard hazing practices from World War I boot camps were
introduced into colleges. In Poland army hazing is called Polish
fala "wave" adopted pre-World War I from non-Polish armies. In the
Russian army (formerly the Red Army) hazing is called "Dedovshchina".
- Police forces (often with a
paramilitary tradition)
- Rescue services, such as
lifeguards (also drilled for operations in military style)
- In workplaces
- Inmate hazing is also common at
confinement facilities around the world, including frequent reports
of beatings and sexual assaults by fellow inmates.
Hazing is considered a felony in
several US states, and anti hazing legislation has been proposed in
other states.
Strategies
to cope with bullying
Helping
victims at school
Many of the responsibilities of members
of a school team are that they need to help the victims of bullying.[26]
The following strategies may be considered:
- Speak with the victim and ask them
if they want to do anything about it, if they refuse take your own
part and start investigating.
- After investigating the situation,
it may be that intervention is necessary with the bully or bullies.
The situation needs to be addressed. Ideally, a resolution to the
problem will be found.
- Inform the parents of the victim
and of the bully. Discuss possible solutions with them. Arrange a
meeting with them if possible.
- Follow up in communicating with
the victim, the parents and the teachers about the situation.
- Monitor the behavior of the bully
and the safety of the victim on a school-wide basis.
- If the problem continues speak
with the parents of the bully again and consider the idea of
expulsion of the bully if problems continue, bullies normally attack
not only one child but more of one, and normally 3 to 4 children are
the attackers, find out exactly who they are.
- Finally you should decide for
yourself the punishment, it depends on how they attacked the
children, how many they have been attacking, since when has it been
a problem, etc.
Strategies
to reduce bullying within schools
Researchers (Olweus, 1993;[27]
Craig & Peplar, 1999;[28]
Ross, 1998;[5] Morrison,
2002;[29] Whitted & Dupper,
2005;[30] Aynsley-Green, 2006;[31])
provide several strategies which address ways to help reduce bullying,
these include:
- Make sure an adult knows what is
happening to their children.
- Make it clear that bullying is
never acceptable
- Recognise that bullying can occur
at all levels within the hierarchy of the school (ie, including
adults)
- Hold a school conference day or
forum devoted to bully/victim problems
- Increase adult supervision in the
yard, halls and washrooms more vigilantly
- Emphasize caring, respect and
safety
- Emphasize consequences of hurting
others
- Enforce consistent and immediate
consequences for aggressive behaviours
- Improve communication among school
administrators, teachers, parents and students
- Have a school problem box where
kids can report problems, concerns and offer suggestions
- Teach cooperative learning
activities
- Help bullies with anger control
and the development of empathy
- Encourage positive peer relations
- Offer a variety of extracurricular
activities which appeal to a range of interests
- Teach your child to defend
himself, verbally and physically, if necessary.
- Keep in mind the range of possible
causes: eg, medical, psychiatric, psychological, developmental,
family problems, etc.
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