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The Bullying Prevention Initiative

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Title: The Bullying Prevention Initiative


1
The Bullying Prevention Initiative
  • Three-Year EvaluationHighlights
  • 2005-2008

2
Overview
  • About The Colorado Trust the Bullying
    Prevention Initiative (BPI)
  • The Bullying Dynamic
  • Major Evaluation Findings from BPI
  • Practical Best Practices
  • Call to Action

3
About The Colorado Trust
  • The Colorado Trust works closely with nonprofit
    organizations in every county across CO to
    improve health and well-being
  • Current vision is to achieve access to health for
    all Coloradoans by 2018
  • Funded the recently completed Bullying Prevention
    Initiative

4
About the Bullying Prevention Initiative
  • Three year, 9-million initiative for school
    districts, schools and community-based
    organizations statewide
  • Built skills in youth and adults to prevent and
    intervene in bullying
  • Served 45 grantees in 2005-2008

5
What is bullying?
  • Bullying is the intentional exclusion of targeted
    youth in activities or social events, gossiping
    meanly about others, unprovoked physical and
    verbal attacks, or using the Internet to
    anonymously harass and verbally attack others.
  • Reflecting an
  • imbalance of power
  • Meant to harm
  • Repeated over time

6
Types of Bullying
  • Physical pushing, shoving, tripping
  • Verbal aggressive teasing and spreading rumors
    or lies
  • Internet telling lies or rumors by email,
    instant messaging or on Web sites

Bullying and teasing are different. If you are
doing it in fun without hurting someones
feelings, its teasing. Bullying is when a joke
isnt funny anymore. Student
7
Significance of Bullying
  • Bullying
  • Is often dismissed as normal behavior
  • Can leave children and young adults feeling
    depressed and alone and even sick
  • Youth who bully typically have a criminal record
    by age 24
  • 17 states have anti-bullying laws
  • Victims have an increased chance of academic
    failure, low self-esteem and inability to connect
    socially with others
  • This was reinforced by BPI Evaluation

8
Evaluation Design
  • Evaluation consisted of
  • Surveys
  • Twice annually
  • Over 3,000 students in 5th, 8th and 11th grades
  • Over 1,500 adult staff members
  • In-depth case studies of 4 school-based bullying
    prevention programs
  • Focus groups with staff and students
  • Comparative analysis of collective demographic
    and student achievement data among participating
    schools

9
Finding One
  • Bullying was prevalent
  • There were certain groups that were more likely
    to bully
  • Degree of bullying varies by grade

10
Prevalence of Bullying
  • In year one of the study, the majority of
    students in 5th through 12th grades said they had
    experienced some form of bullying
  • In year one, for the preceding 12 months
  • 57 of students reported bullying others verbally
  • 33 reported bullying others physically
  • 10 reported bullying via the Internet

11
Who bullies?
  • Boys were
  • 75 percent more likely to use physical bullying
    than girls
  • 22 percent more likely to bully others verbally
  • No difference between boys and girls for Internet
    bullying (cyberbullying)
  • Incidents did appear to be higher in rural vs.
    urban areas

12
Bullying varies by grade
  • Physical and Internet bullying increased in
    middle school, but dropped off in high school
  • Verbal bullying rose significantly in middle
    school and remained elevated in high school
  • Almost 80 percent of middle and high school youth
    reported that they had verbally bullied others

The middle school climate is more difficult.
There are many social cliques. Substance abuse is
earlier. Sexual activity is earlier, and it is
difficult to create positive values.
- School coordinator
13
Implications of Finding 1
  • Bullying prevention should begin during the
    elementary school years when the behavior is
    first emerging
  • Throughout middle and high school years, focusing
    on verbal and cyberbullying in particular is
    critical

14
Finding Two
  • Beliefs and behaviors changed for the better over
    the three years
  • Youth and adults awareness of bullying increased
  • On average, bullying decreased over the course of
    the BPI

15
Changing Beliefs
  • Focus group findings demonstrate students
    feeling that bullying is a problem and that it
    should be avoided due to its potential to harm
    others
  • Adult surveys show that 95 of adults realized it
    was their responsibility to intervene in bullying
    situations

16
Bullying declined
  • Over three years
  • Decrease in students experiencing physical
    bullying from 70 to 61
  • Students being bullied verbally (which included
    Internet bullying) dropped from 76 in the to 71
  • Students bullying others physically or verbally
    decreased from 56 to 44

17
Implications of Finding 2
  • Bullying can be reduced over time if bullying
    prevention programming is effectively implemented
  • Adult awareness of, and intervention in, bullying
    situations is critical to reducing bullying
  • When students perceive bullying as a negative
    behavior, bullying decreases

18
Finding Three
  • School culture had a direct impact on bullying
  • Positive relationships with adults
  • Less bullying occurred when the culture was not
    accepting of bullying

Bullying is everywhere families, schools, even
churches. We cant really expect children to
change until we as adults truly embrace this.
Adults must be role models for bullying
prevention. Bullying Prevention Initiative
Grantee
19
Relationships with adults
  • 63 of adults indicated that their school was
    doing a fair amount to a lot in
  • Demonstrating commitment to address bullying
  • Developing and implementing policies and programs
  • Supporting an active stakeholder group
  • Providing training and supervision of teachers
    and staff
  • Promoting positive youth development, cultural
    competency and youth-adult partnerships

20
School culture
  • Evaluation found that students take cues from the
    school culture
  • Youth who approved of bullying were significantly
    more likely to report bullying others
  • Youth who approved of bullying were less likely
    to seek adult help or think that others would
    step in to prevent bullying
  • This pattern did not differ much by different
    types of bullying, gender, ethnicity or
    geographic location

21
Less bullying occurred when the culture was not
accepting of bullying
  • Focus groups told evaluators
  • Elementary level students were aware of general
    school norms and acceptability of bullying
  • Were very aware of bullying, the need to refrain
    and the potential harm to others
  • Overall bullying behavior declined from year 1 to
    year 3

22
Implications of Finding 3
  • A culture that actively discourages bullying
    behavior and encourages trust, fairness and
    respect can reduce bullying behavior
  • Student and adult intervention in bullying
    situations is important in reducing bullying
    behavior

23
Finding four
  • Schools with lower levels of bullying
    demonstrated higher standardized test scores
    (Colorado Student Assessment Program or CSAP)

Previous studies have shown that bullying is
linked to learning difficulties resulting from
fear of being bullied, distractibility,
absenteeism and dropping out of school. ?
Bullying Preventing Initiative Evaluation
24
Academic Impacts
  • Almost 33 of schools below the average frequency
    of bullying in the first year of the initiative
    were above the average CSAP score
  • Only 14 of schools reporting a higher frequency
    of bullying were above the average CSAP score

25
First Year Bullying CSAP
26
Trend Continued
  • In year two, about 47 of the schools
    experiencing less bullying showed
    higher-than-average CSAP scores
  • Only about 6 of schools with more bullying were
    above this indicator of academic achievement

27
Second Year Bullying CSAP
28
Chicken or the Egg?
  • While the findings show an association between
    bullying and overall school performance, the data
    did not reveal whether low-achieving schools
    provided a favorable environment for bullying or
    whether bullying in schools interfered with
    learning and achievement
  • Evaluators hypothesize that they likely
    influenced each other

29
School Climate
Achievement
30
Implications of Finding 4
  • Schools with low academic achievement scores
    often struggle to nurture caring and responsive
    relationships between adults and youth
  • If children are afraid to come to school because
    they are bullied regularly, it is unlikely that
    they will start each day ready to learn

31
Best Practices in Bullying Prevention
  • Regularly assess the social climate in schools
    and other youth-centered environments
  • Make bullying prevention an integral and
    permanent component of the school environment
  • Establish and enforce school rules and policies
    related to bullying
  • Provide on-going training for school staff and
    increase adult supervision in hot spots for
    bullying

32
Best Practices in Bullying Prevention
  • Form a team responsible for coordinating bullying
    prevention efforts
  • Garner support of school staff, parents and other
    key partners
  • Give young people an active and meaningful role
  • Develop cultural competency strategies, skills
    and programs that are inclusive and enhance
    communications and relationship building

33
Bullying prevention is most effective when
  • Adults understand the extent of the bullying
    problem in a school
  • Emphasis is placed on a positive school climate
    and culture
  • Bystanders step in
  • There is complete buy-in among all school staff

34
A Call to Action
  • Key questions for
  • Parents
  • Educators
  • Policymakers

35
Key Questions for Parents
  • Does your child feel safe in school?
  • Does your childs school have an anti-bullying
    program in place?
  • Is it effective, and how does the school know?
  • Does the school ask parents and students for
    their input on how to prevent bullying?

36
Key Questions for Educators
  • Do the adults in the school understand the extent
    of the bullying problem?
  • Can they distinguish bullying from other normal
    conflict?
  • Has the school created an environment that
    promotes care and concern for others?
  • Is all staff bought in to bullying prevention?
  • Are these prevention strategies embedded
    school-wide?

37
Key Questions for Policymakers
  • Have policymakers passed legislation or local
    policies that define and prohibit bullying?
  • Have school districts been encouraged to identify
    methods to decrease and document bullying?
  • Are these local and state-level policies
    effective?
  • Have the voices of educators, students and
    parents been part of the discussion?

38
What to know more?
  • Visit www.coloradotrust.org to download the full
    evaluation report.
  • To learn more about how to prevent bullying, view
    the Bullying Prevention Resource Guide at
    www.bullyingprevention.org.

39
Q A
40
Links to articles for BPI evaluation
  • Cook, C. R., Tuthill, L., Williams, K. R,
    Guerra, N. G. (2007). Cyberbulling What is it
    and what can we do about it? Communique 36 1-5.
  • Cook, C. R., Williams, K. R., Guerra, N. G,
    Kim, T. (in press). Variability in the prevalence
    of bullying and victimization A cross-national
    and methodological analysis. In S. R. Jimerson,
    S. M. Swearer, D. L. Espelage, (Eds.), The
    international handbook of school bullying. New
    York Routledge.
  • Guerra, N. G., Williams, K. R. (in press).
    Implementing bullying prevention in diverse
    settings Geographic, economic, and cultural
    influences. In E. M. Vernberg B.K. Biggs
    (Eds.), Preventing and treating bullying and
    victimization. Oxford University Press.
  • Williams, K. R., Guerra, N. G. (2007).
    Prevalence and predictors of Internet bullying.
    Journal of Adolescent Health 41 514-521.
  • Cook, C.R., Williams, K.R., Guerra, N.G., Kim,
    T.E., Sadek, S. (In Progress) Predictors of
    Bullying and Victimization in Childhood and
    Adolescence A Meta-Analytic Investigation.
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