This product is a Google Slides Presentation designed to introduce educators and students to Bullying Prevention (Anti-bullying Education) in a classroom setting. The presentation contains a number of info-graphics and corresponding content on Bully Prevention. This presentation provides valuable knowledge for any educator looking to advance in their understanding on the topic. This product can also be used as a workshop to present as professional development. As a teacher, you can also share this presentation with your student and use it as a classroom lesson. This Bullying Prevention Presentation includes the following: Definition of Bullying Cyberbullying The Different Types of Bullying Roles in Bullying Situations The Danger of Using Labels Prevention Strategies Being More than a Bystander Protected Categories Indicators of Being Bullied And Much More Content
Use these 10 anti-bullying activity journal prompts with your students to help them work through their difficult experiences with bullying.
Anti-bullying themed bracelets for your students! All you need to do is print and cut and then have your students color their anti-bullying message bracelets. Cut the ends and tape together to fit each student. This is the perfect activity for bullying prevention in your classroom or for school-wide bullying prevention activities! All aged kids will love these designs! You can also laminate each bracelet if you want to make them last. This product includes 18 different anti-bullying themed designs. Click HERE to send a Counselor's Corner Newsletter home with information for your school families so they can learn more about: What bullying is and is not Effects of bullying Who to contact if you suspect your child is being bullied How to talk to your child about bullying Click HERE to view all Bullying Prevention products to bundle and save money! Connect with us! Receive an EXCLUSIVE FREEBIE and tips for your counseling program once a month Follow Counseling Tools by Jenn on TPT
How to prevent bullying in school? 25% of children are bullied every year. Bullying prevention is important. Learn how to stop bullying.
Activities to teach children what bullying is and empower them to take action and make school a safer and more inclusive space for everyone. This is a free resource that we hope will help your school with any bullying behaviour.Related Products❤️ Anti-Bullying Posters (this too is a FREE RESOURCE).
These anti-bullying journal prompts are a fantastic tool that you can use to combat bullying statistics among bullies & their victims.
How to prevent bullying of kids with autism! With 9 ways to stop bulling & 15 anti-bullying activities, learn how to educate, protect & empower our youth!
| Cyberbullying, it's not a game! It's your Life!!!
From teaching tips and parental strategies, to anti-bullying activities and games, these ideas offer great inspiration to help kids stand up to bullying!
Use these 10 anti-bullying activity journal prompts with your students to help them work through their difficult experiences with bullying.
This bullying lesson using two apples will provide a memorable, visual to show the damage that can be done when we use harsh, unkind words.
Bullyology® takes a thoughtful and proactive approach designed to educate and inspire your students. We give students the tools to grow
How to prevent bullying of kids with autism! With 9 ways to stop bulling & 15 anti-bullying activities, learn how to educate, protect & empower our youth!
The wrinkled heart activity or crumpled paper bullying lesson is a powerful way to teach children about the lasting effects of bullying.This simple activity is a valuable friendship lesson that shows
Stop Bullying Logo I found bullyingpresent participle of bul·ly Verb: Use superior strength or influence to intimidate (someone), typically to force him or her to do what one wants. I wish I knew what makes mean kids tick. What about the make up of a human being makes some kids overpower the weak or fragile? Why do the tears and fears of a weaker child make some feel kids more powerful or superior? Is this survival of the fittest gone terribly wrong? Is it learned behavior or human nature? Who is to blame? Are some kids just inherently mean or do they just lack empathy? Are their moral compasses broken or poorly calibrated? Do the parents of these meanies know how they behave? Do these parents give a damn? Did their parents teach them this behavior through example? Does this kid even realize what he is doing is wrong?!! I realize there is a certain degree of competitiveness programmed into all of us. This competitiveness has caused the human race to thrive in many respects, motivating man to organize and civilize to improve our lives. The one-upsmanship inherent to being human makes us strive to do better and be better and want better. We all strive to be the best we can be, but some do so at the expense of others' well-being. Is our message to our kids to be their best getting skewed to be the best? Is this need to be "better than" what makes mean kids keep pummeling their targets long after it is clear they are physically or socially in control? If we are so freakin' civilized, why does this uncivilized behavior keep happening? And why can't I protect my kids from these things? Princess and Birdie already sense they are different from a lot of their peers and don't quite fit in most of the time, so why do they have to continually hear about it from their morally inept schoolmates? The children at school that know my girls love and support them and are typically good pals. What astonishes me-- devastates me to the point of tears-- is that many of the older students are the culprits of this picking and-- dare I say-- bullying of younger children. These kids should know better! Most of these kids will be targets in middle school, for various reasons, and the mean vindictive part of my mommy brain is horrifyingly gleeful about this! I think to myself, lock them all together in one room and let Darwinism do the rest! I secretly wish that some bigger, meaner, more mentally polluted child will crush them the way they crush my precious girls (and all their other victims, for that matter)... and then I take it all back. Part of me wants to hate these mean children, but mostly I just feel sorry for them. When I see a bullying child, I see a child that is much weaker (in many ways) than the child being victimized. I see a kid who feels so small that he has to tear down others to feel big. I see a kid whose parents need to show him boundaries and a positive example for how to be a good citizen. I see a kid that needs to know that winning isn't everything. I see a kid that craves parental love, support, and attention and will do anything to get it-- even if it means getting in trouble. It's unfortunate, but some parents create bullies by not being moral educators for their kids-- by not guiding them through the impossibly difficult task of growing up. Now, I'm not blaming all bullying on parents and their parenting, or lack thereof. Our kids aren't with us all the time-- but they are still our responsibility. Kids often learn from life/sports/reality tv/other kids that if you can't be the best, you need to be the meanest or the worst to survive. Our kids need to hear from a respected adult that this isn't the truth. We as parents can't rely solely on our kids' teachers and guidance counselors to teach them this lesson. We have to do this ourselves! WE HAVE TO BE PARENTS, NOT BYSTANDERS IN OUR CHILDREN'S LIVES. We need to teach our kids to be friends, not foes. That being said, I will step off my soapbox and give you some data... Courtesy of Make Beats Not Beatdowns (MBNBD)
Free printable Anti Bullying printable easy and hard wordsearch puzzles.
This writing activity creates a bulletin board display that shares the consequences of bullying through a chain of events!
The picture book One by Kathryn Otoshi has a simple yet powerful anti-bullying message. While it's appropriate for younger kids, the concepts are a little abstract. Here is an activity box that children can use to retell
Use these 10 anti-bullying activity journal prompts with your students to help them work through their difficult experiences with bullying.
Anti-Bullying Poster: This poster is great for any classroom or school counseling office! It provides ways to not be a bully and using the B.U.L.L.Y Acronym! Enjoy!
Bullying has really been in the news lately, at least in my area. This term is thrown around a lot, but often people don't really understand what it is. I created this product after a workshop about the differences between bullying and conflict. I wanted to share with my students the differences ...
Sometimes a book can change a heart.
“A bully is really a friend in need.” Sad, when you think of it. But don’t worry. The K-9 bully elves of the North Pole know how to set things right. They know how to teach each and every one of us to be “A B C Assertive Bold Confident”. We don’t need to fight to stand up for our rights. We need to be ourselves, be proud of who we are, and show others that we are worthy of being our own unique selves. We are all different. The K-9 bully elves have an interesting exercise to help us overcome the stigma of being bullied. Hold a mirror and look into it and say words that demonstrate your self-confidence, like: “Dear mirror, dear mirror,/ what do I see?/ A confident child – yes, it’s me!” Bullying is a global issue. And it doesn’t begin and end in childhood, though, in many ways, perhaps that’s where it hurts the most. Victoria Ann Devine’s picture book story, Sparky’s Bully Workshop: A Reason to Rhyme, is full of rhyming good advice on how to stand up to a bully without becoming aggressive and a bully yourself. Taking the power of compassionate dogs, creating a workshop environment with a K-9 bully team leader, these North Pole anti-bully agents will help young readers build self-confidence, self-esteem and give them the assertive, bold, and confident power to stand up to bullies in a non-aggressive manner. The rhyming verses and colorful illustrations help make this a fun read as well as being positively educational.
Download our anti-bullying resource pack and help your children to learn about different types of bullying, how to deal with bullying and how to help others. It includes a topic guide, activity resources, display materials and more!
Anti bullying, arts and crafts, creative, educates kids teens and parents, elementary and middle school, glitter letter, National bullying prevention month, October, poster ideas,
Make learning fun with these anti-bully bracelets. It includes 22 anti-bully bracelet templates to use with your anti-bullying campaign or lessons. Not only will kids love wearing these at school, but they will also communicate to parents what we are learning.TEACHER-FRlENDLY FEATURESThis resource h...
With all the recent events happening across the United States in schools, we felt it was time to address the issue of bullying. In this article, we hope to help you, as an educator, to stop bullying in its tracks. In order to stop bullying, students have to understand what bullying is. Brainstorm with your students what their perceptions are about bullying. Ask your students to share a time when they felt they were bullied or when they saw another student being bullied. Students can share in front of the entire class- just make it clear that they are not to use any specific names. Students can also share their experiences on an index card that can be collected. Write down some of their experiences on chart paper. After the list is compiled, engage your students in a discussion as to which of the incidents would be considered bullying. Your main focus for this part is for your students to understand that bullying is where someone is repeatedly harassing a student. Keep the compiled list of experiences handy so you can refer to it when you discuss forms of bullying. Pre Survey To begin, have your students taking the “Bully Buster Pre-Survey” to see what they already know. When students are finished with the pre-survey, have a general discussion about bullying with your students. The “Bullying Pre-Survey” can help guide this discussion. Ask them if they have ever been bullied before? Most, if not all, of your students will raise their hands. This is common. Key Definitions Share with your students the “Key Bullying Vocabulary Cards”. It is up to you how you want to share these. You can project each one on a screen and have students take notes or provide each student a set of cards. These cards can also be displayed around the room. The vocabulary words on the cards are important words that relate to bullying. The words include bully, bystander, victim, upstander, bullying, and assistant. Below is an example of the cards. Forms of Bullying At this point, share with your students the forms of bullying. The “Forms of Bullying Cards” will help you with this. You can project each one on a screen and have students take notes or provide each student a set of cards. These cards can also be displayed around the room. The forms of bullying include verbal, social, physical, and cyber. Once you feel that your students understand the forms of bullying refer back to their experiences and have your students identify which form of bullying was taking place. Reasons for Bullying An important discussion to have with your students is why one student may choose to bully another student. Brainstorm with your students about these reasons. Some possible reasons for bullying are: It makes them feel stronger, smarter, or better than the other student. The student who is bullying may have been bullied or picked on. The student may think that it is what he/she has to do in order to hang out with the “in” crowd. The student may think it is okay because they see others doing it. The student may be jealous of the other another student. Confronting a Bully Share and discuss how a “Bully Buster” poster can be useful when confronting a bully. This poster can also be displayed in your classroom. Discuss what the “BUSTER” acronym means. B- Be a friend to someone who is being bullied. Bully Buster Tip: Encourage your students to not walk away from the incident in order to show the victim that they care. U- Use a firm voice to the bully to let him/her know you mean it. Bully Buster Tip: Remind your students that If they are shy, timid, or afraid, that if they S- Stand up to and speak out against the bully. Bully Buster Tip: Let your students know that it is okay to stand up for what they believe is right. Stress the importance that this should be done in a respectful and non-physical way. T- Tell an adult about what happened. Bully Buster Tip: Some students may not have a problem letting an adult know about a situation that they are concerned about. However, some students may worry that they will be known as a “tattler” or “snitch”. It’s important for students to know that when they share something with an adult, it will remain confidential. E- Exit the scene with the victim as soon as you can. Bully Buster Tip: The longer students stick around, the higher the chance that the bully will continue or the situation could escalate. R- Reassure the person being bullied that you are there to help. Bully Buster Tip: Remind your students that showing empathy to someone else is a valuable part of life. Below is an example of a Bully Buster poster that you could display in your classroom. Role Play Once you feel that your students have a pretty good understanding of how to be a “Bully Buster” it may be time to use the “Bully Buster Role Play cards”. It is up to you on how you want the role play to look within your classroom, but you may find it beneficial to use all roles (bully, victim, bystander, upstander, and assistant). Your students may also benefit by referring to the “Bully Buster Poster” when role playing. In addition, you may find it helpful for your students to reflect on each role play. Below is one example of role play cards you could use. Post Survey At the end of the unit, have your students take a post survey. We use the same questions that are on the pre survey. It is powerful to see what they have learned and what they will now do to help stop bullying not only in their class group of peers but school-wide as well. Bully Buster Contract Challenge your students to be “Bully Busters”! Have them sign a contract. Below is an example you could use. For the complete Bullying Unit that includes vocabulary cards, role play cards, a game board, both pre and post surveys and so much more, click here.
Bullying has become a very popular word amongst school age children. However, this word is often misunderstood. Bullying is action(s) repeated over and over again by an individual or group of people with the intent to harm either physically, verbally, socially (emotionally),
Promote bullying prevention with this Bullying Is Poster. An affordable and engaging way to get your message across. This poster is perfect for any educator or teacher. It will look great in any office, classroom, or hallway. Printed on high-quality, heavy cardstock with a UV coating. View Bullying Prevention Poster Set