The
following article is from MSNBC about Online
Bullying. This article is a perfect example
of why we should observe and have activities
related to the VSBA Bullying Prevention
Awareness month. As we all know behavior
such as this can not be legislated but
"education" about this issue/problem can be
addressed. The packet of information that
the VSBA sent out earlier this year has a
lot of information to help start the
discussion about preventing bullying in your
schools. School board members,
superintendents, teachers, and parents can
play a critical role in creating a climate
where bullying is not tolerated. It has
been proven when adults and children stand
together, bullying ends. Also, available on
the VSBA website are: a sample news release,
a resolution adopted by the VSBA Board of
Directors, the VSBA policy on bullying, and
articles on school bullying, including a
survey conducted by NSBA/CUBE on the Urban
School Climate.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Online bullying compels states to
act
Critics question whether legislation
can curb kids' bad behavior
John Halligan shows the Web page devoted to
his son, Ryan, at his home in Underhill, Vt.
Ryan, bullied by classmates for months
online, killed himself in 2003.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Ryan Patrick Halligan was
bullied for months online. Classmates sent
the 13-year-old Essex Junction, Vt., boy
instant messages calling him gay. He was
threatened, taunted and insulted incessantly
by so-called cyberbullies.
In 2003, Ryan killed himself.
“He just went into a deep spiral in eighth
grade. He couldn’t shake this rumor,” said
Ryan’s father, John Halligan, who became a
key proponent of a state law that forced
Vermont schools to put anti-bullying rules
in place. He’s now pushing for a broader law
to punish cyberbullying often done at home
after school and wants every other state
to enact laws expressly prohibiting it.
States from Oregon to Rhode Island are
considering crackdowns to curb or outlaw the
behavior in which kids taunt or insult peers
on social Web sites like MySpace or via
instant messages. Still, there is some
disagreement over how effective crackdowns
will be and how to do it.
‘The kids are forcing our hands’
“The kids are forcing our hands to do
something legislatively,” said Rhode Island
state Sen. John Tassoni, who introduced a
bill to study cyberbullying and hopes to
pass a cyberbullying law by late 2007.
But others argue that legislation would be
ineffective. George McDonough, an education
coordinator with Rhode Island’s Department
of Education, concedes that the Internet has
become an “instant slam book” but questions
whether laws can stem bad behavior.
“You can’t legislate norms, you can only
teach norms,” he said. “Just because it’s a
law, they don’t necessarily follow it. I
mean, look at the speed limit.”
The Internet allows students to insult
others in relative anonymity, and experts
who study cyberbullying say it can be more
damaging to victims than traditional
bullying like fistfights and classroom
taunts.
Legislators and educators say there’s a need
for guidelines outlining how to punish
cyberbullying. They say the behavior has
gone unchecked for years, with few laws or
policies on the books explaining how to
treat it.
Cyberbullying is often limited to online
insults about someone’s physical appearance,
friends, clothing or sexuality. But some
cyberbullies are more creative. In
Washington state, a bully stole a girl’s
instant message username and used it to send
out insulting messages.
Punishment vs. free speech
In New York, two high school boys were
accused of operating an Internet site that
listed girls’ “sexual secrets.” Prosecutors
decided not to charge the boys because of
free-speech concerns.
Steven Brown, executive director of the
Rhode Island branch of the American Civil
Liberties Union, said it will be difficult
to draft a cyberbullying law that doesn’t
infringe on free-speech rights.
“The fact that two teenagers say nasty
things about each other is a part of growing
up,” he said. “How much authority does a
school have to monitor, regulate and punish
activities occurring inside a student’s
home?”
In Arkansas, the state Senate this month
passed a bill calling on school districts to
set up policies to address cyberbullying
only after it was amended to settle concerns
about students’ free-speech rights.
States are taking different approaches to
the problem.
This email is confidential and may well
be legally privileged. If you have
received it in error, you are on notice
of its status. Please notify us
immediately by reply e-mail and then
delete this message from your system.
Please do not copy it or use if for any
purposes, or disclose its contents to
any other person. To do so could
violate state and Federal privacy laws.
Thank you for your cooperation.
|