Showing posts with label bullystatistics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bullystatistics. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Friday, March 28, 2014
School Age Bullying: A New Age of Micro-Terrorism
Edward Brown, M.S.
Introduction
Bullying has become a hot issue in recent times.
According to the StopBullying.gov web
site, bullying is defined as “Unwanted, aggressive behavior among school aged
children that involves a real or perceived power imbalance. The behavior is
repeated, or has the potential to be repeated, over time. Both kids who are
bullied and who bully others may have serious, lasting problems.”
Bullystatistics.org
quoted that, When it comes to verbal
bullying, this type of bullying is the most common type with about 77 percent
of all students being bullied verbally in some way or another including mental
bullying or even verbal abuse. These types of bullying can also include
spreading rumors, yelling obscenities or other derogatory terms based on an
individual's race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, etc. Out of the 77
percent of those bullied, 14 percent have a severe or bad reaction to the
abuse, according to recent school bullying statistics. These numbers make up
the students that experience poor self-esteem, depression, anxiety about going
to school and even suicidal thoughts (bullycide) as a result of being bullied
by their peers. Also as part of this study, about one in five students admitted
they are responsible for bullying their peers. Almost half of all students fear
harassment or bullying in the bathroom at school, according to these school
bullying statistics. As a result of this fear and anxiety of being bullied,
many students will make excuses or find ways around going to school. School
bullying statistics also reveal that teens ages 12-17 believe they have seen
violence increase at their schools. In fact, these numbers also show that most
violent altercations between students are more likely to occur on school
grounds than on the way to school for many teens (para. 2).
In a recent focus group conducted by Edward Brown of Core
Edge Police Professional Development to high school students ages 16-18 in the
metro Atlanta (GA) area, Brown uncovered some interesting opinions that served both
as the state of school age bullying and what can be done to eradicate it. Brown
defines Micro-Terrorism as “A systematic or pattern of violence and
intimidation against an individual or small group to achieve power.” This report seeks to create a framework as a
basis for adopting recommended solutions to the bullying problem.
Statement of Problem
Because of the insular world of young people, adults have
less influence or interaction with student daily existence in rectifying school
age bullying. Consequently, victims of
bullying have to develop practical means for developing effective assertive and
self-confidence building skills. The world of young people is reminiscent of
the TV show, “The Little Rascals,” where adults and authority figures are
tableau to this world. Consequently, the
thought of going to an adult to report bullying based on this insularity is
antithetical to youth psychodynamics. As such, to cope within this environment,
students have to be provided the skills to survive and thrive. One of the key components that came out of
this focus group was that bullying centered on the acquisition and maintenance
of power. Moreover, in some instances there might be a correlation between
subcultural value systems coupled with societal exclusion that perpetuate
bullying.
Sample
This group consisted of six boys between the ages of 16
and 18. They came from backgrounds within the lower socioeconomic strata.
Perhaps two of the six expressed middle class values as well as exposure to
higher disposable income. It is important to note that they were participants
within a GED program where they opted to attend based on poor academic
performance within a traditional high school setting. This distinction is important, because bullying
may take on different characteristics based on cultural dynamics. For example,
within certain communities, values like the ability to fight well, attract the
opposite sex, play sports, and exhibit a “cool” or trendy persona, are highly
regarded. Such values may be a response to limited education, money, and
significant professional contacts that lend themselves to traditional factors
for acquiring power. Consequently, in this context, power within these
communities may be a response to the lack of inclusion within the majority
culture. The term “Power” came up several times during the discussion, and was
viewed as a response to a lack of empowerment on the part of the bully, as well
as a sense of jealousy by the bully for ideal traits seen in the victim.
Methodology
The ideal research method encompasses qualitative and
quantitative research. A great deal of
this data is qualitative, anecdotal, and subjective. Additionally, the analysis
is derived from the statements of participants, personal experience, and the
current research on the interplay between power and relationships. Correlations
that cannot be quantified will attempt to draw out several options represented
through qualitative analysis as a means of exploring and explaining phenomenon.
Discussion
Students pointed out that both the bully and the victim
have a sense of disempowerment. The bully feels that he cannot have an ideal
life based on lacking certain financial resources, smartness, or
attractiveness. In response, the victim of bullying feels overwhelmed or
“terrorized” by the state of constant fear.
Students noted that due to the insular world of youths,
victims of bullying do not reach out to adults or authority figures. It was felt that such adult intervention only
heightened the problem. Adults are
viewed as intruders to the youth world. Any introduction of adults into this
world by another youth is a violation of unspoken rules. Also, “ratting out” or
reporting the activity of another student to an adult was seen as taboo.
Students acknowledged that bullying has led to suicides
and homicides, but suggested that bullies do not think or consider the “end
game.” In other words, the possibility of a victim harming himself or others as
a result of bullying never enters the bully’s mind. Essentially, the bully is lashing out based
on internal feelings of inadequacy, not intentionally trying to inflict
long-term harm on a victim.
Some of the students admitted being labeled bullies
themselves. One of the participants
shared that the death of his mother made him feel that students with living
mothers had an advantage over him. Although he had a reputation as a trendy,
popular dresser, he still felt an emotional void due to his mother’s death. Consequently, he took his aggression out on
other students. The subject of low self-esteem and jealousy that caused
powerlessness was a recurring theme. Most agreed that bullies simply did not
like themselves or their options in life.
When asked what steps could victims of bullying take to
ward of bullying, a few solutions were provided. First, the victim can confront
the bully. In some instances, the bully
befriends a victim to discover a victim’s soft or weak points. Much like a
criminal who looks for easy prey, a bully is attempting to determine the amount
of rejection he may receive from a potential victim. If he does not receive any push back the very
first time he lodges a verbal or physical attack, he exploits this perceived
weakness within the victim. Students advised that in the very first encounter, the
victim must demonstrate resilience and assertiveness by warding off bully
attacks. The victim does not have to win decisively over the bully, but has to
demonstrate assertiveness, self-confidence, and a will to be independent.
Secondly, students discussed the aspect of “indirect
power,” where other individuals demonstrate a high degree of power to intercede
on behalf of the victim. These allies may be older siblings, adversaries to an
identified bully, or individuals that a bully fears or respects among his
peers. Ultimately, a victim feels that
reinforcements are the only way a bully can be effectively dealt with. A third form of power titled, “Consolidated
Power,” involves a victim using his personal skills and talents to leverage
these skills and talents in exchange for power.
An example would be a victim, who is proficient in math, leveraging his
skills to the school football team in exchange for protection against bullies.
This would be no different, in a geopolitical sense, than a small country
seeking the aid and protection of a superpower in exchange for access to a
small country’s resources or strategic positioning.
Since victims of bullying exist in an insular world, they
have to acquire the tools and skills to ward off stronger adversaries. This
flies in the face of pundits who place greater emphasis on adult intervention.
Adult intervention is necessary, but must be inclusive within a long-term
strategy. This is critical because
students postulated that bully suspensions only heightened bullying, because
bullies adopt an “Institutionalized” mentality, reminiscent of prison inmates,
but reversed. Whereas, inmates become accustomed to being incarcerated and
embrace the experience, bullies don’t enjoy school and enjoy the experience of
not being in school. If a bully is not
academically inclined, suspending him from school supports his intentions, not
thwart them.
Overwhelmingly, students felt that bullying would always
be present. Because of the human need for power and the greed and jealousy that
are derived from a competitive world, bullies will find ways to obtain power.
Solutions
Students suggested that fear can serve as a motivator for
curtailing bully behavior. Fear has to
be a motivator for a bully. Programs like “Scared Straight,” where youth
violators are ushered into a prison to mingle with inmates may serve as a
deterrent. Inmates are encouraged to threaten, bully, harass, and intimidate
student violators as a means of positive behavior modification. This fear
serves to instill introspection and reconsideration on the bully’s part. In addition, since bullies are purported not
to be conscious of the results of their actions, they are encouraged to visit morgues
to demonstrate the results of their behavior.
Psychologists assert that people are moved more by fear of loss than the
hope for gain. Students also suggested
that bullies should seek counseling for low self-esteem, jealousy, and anger
management. Much like the U.S. Military, bullies have to be broken down to be
built up.
Conclusion
Currently, it seems that school age bullying is on the
rise. If the genesis of bullying is representative of powerlessness, then it
will continue to grow exponentially. The reach of the Internet, in a
borderless, global economy, will continually evolve where individuals feel even
more insignificant and irrelevant.
Consequently, individuals will act out in aberrant ways to seek
attention or assuage feelings of powerlessness.
The easy accessibility of firearms coupled with the desensitization of
human life via multimedia and computer games, suggests that harming and killing
others out of fear will also rise. Powerlessness within an insular world,
reinforced through Pop culture, creates an incendiary environment that is
consistently exploding.
Recommendations
· Develop assertive and self-confidence
building classes for students who have been bullied
· Identify bullies and use behavior
modification tactics that restrain bullying behavior
· Create ancillary programs apart from school
suspensions for bullying
· Institute sensitivity and diversity training
as part of core school curriculum
· Activate psychologists into school systems to
address cases of disempowerment, anger and low self-esteem
· Partner with law enforcement agencies and
Department of Family and Children Services (DFACS) to monitor households that
have been identified as volatile to the psycho-emotional health of children
· Develop advanced interpersonal relationship
skills that encourage students to communicate openly
· Create personal development seminars for parents
to address outstanding problems
About the Author
Edward Brown, M.S., is a researcher and lead instructor
for Core Edge Police Professional Development.
Ed is a former Atlanta police officer and has trained command staff and
supervisors throughout the U.S. on communication and leadership development
skills. He also is an Adult Education instructor for the Atlanta Public School
System.
He has advanced legal training from the University of
Dayton School of Law and a master’s degree from Mercer University in Public
Safety Leadership.
Ed is the author of nine books including: How to Keep the World From Bullying You: Becoming More Assertive and Self-Confident for Smart and Gifted Students and Police Leadership: The Morale Driven
Police Department.
For more information on dealing with bullying, visit: http://www.amazon.com/Keep-World-From-Bullying-Self-Confident-ebook/dp/B00IFVNDAU
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
How to Keep the World From Bullying You…Book Release
For Immediate Release
February 20, 2014
12:00PM (EST)
Atlanta, GA—February 20,
2014---Core Edge Image & Charisma Institute recently published a digital book on Amazon Kindle titled, How
to Keep the World From Bulling You: Becoming More Assertive & Self
Confident for Smart and Gifted Students to address the upsurge of students
committing suicide and homicides as a result of bullying. The Bullying
Statistics web site reported that 77 percent of all students are being bullied
verbally in some way or another including psychological and verbal abuse. Teens
ages 12-17 believe they have seen violence increase at their schools.
Reportedly, in 85 percent of bullying cases, very little intervention or effort
is made by a peer, teacher, or school administrator to effectively stop the
bullying from taking place initially or reoccurring. This book lays the groundwork for parents and
students to take proactive measures for tackling the issue head on.
How to Keep the
World From Bullying You…author and former Atlanta police officer Edward Brown
says, “I am a survivor of elementary and middle school bullying, so this issue
is very personal. My experience as a police officer and professional
development instructor led me to begin reviewing the data on the impact of
bullying on self-esteem and productivity.
I felt that many anti-bullying advocates were well meaning, but lacked
the knowledge to deal with the power aspect of bullying. My approach deals with
shifting the power back to the victim through leveraging internal fortitude
with external allegiances.”
How to Keep the
World From Bullying You: Becoming More Assertive & Self-Confident for Smart
and Gifted Students can be reviewed on Amazon.com at: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00IFVNDAU
For more
information, call (678) 698-3386.
Core Edge Image
& Charisma Institute teaches clients how to be more persuasive and
influential in their communication and leadership skills. Core Edge Image & Charisma Institute was
founded in Atlanta in 2002.
# # #
Monday, February 17, 2014
Is Bullying a Public Safety Problem?
Edward Brown, M.S.
Bullying has become a hot issue in recent times. According
to the StopBullying.gov web site, bullying is defined as “Unwanted, aggressive
behavior among school aged children that involves a real or perceived power
imbalance. The behavior is repeated, or has the potential to be repeated, over
time. Both kids who are bullied and who bully others may have serious, lasting
problems."
Bullystatistics.org quoted that, When it comes to verbal bullying, this type of bullying is the most
common type with about 77 percent of all students being bullied verbally in
some way or another including mental bullying or even verbal abuse. These types
of bullying can also include spreading rumors, yelling obscenities or other
derogatory terms based on an individual's race, gender, sexual orientation,
religion, etc. Out of the 77 percent of those bullied, 14 percent have a severe
or bad reaction to the abuse, according to recent school bullying statistics.
These numbers make up the students that experience poor self-esteem,
depression, anxiety about going to school and even suicidal thoughts
(bullycide) as a result of being bullied by their peers. Also as part of this
study, about one in five students admitted they are responsible for bullying
their peers. Almost half of all students fear harassment or bullying in the
bathroom at school, according to these school bullying statistics. As a result
of this fear and anxiety of being bullied, many students will make excuses or
find ways around going to school. School bullying statistics also reveal that
teens ages 12-17 believe they have seen violence increase at their schools. In
fact, these numbers also show that most violent altercations between students
are more likely to occur on school grounds than on the way to school for many
teens (para. 2).
Edward Brown, M.S., of Core Edge Police Professional
Development provides answers to questions on whether bullying is a public
safety issue.
Q: Why do you believe bullying has gained so much attention recently?
Brown: As you know, bullying has been around since the inception
of humans. I believe it’s gained greater exposure recently, because of the
fallout. In highly publicized cases, the
victims of bullying have either committed homicide or suicide. The terrorism
that plagues victims of bullying feels unbearable. I’m speaking from
experience. As an elementary and middle
school student, I felt like my world was crumbling when I was bullied.
Q: But you didn’t kill anybody or yourself. What has changed over the years?
Brown: The current environment for any social interaction is
perceived as less safe compared to the past.
With the rise of school shootings, foreign and domestic terrorism, and
the increase of violence in the media, it feels like civilization, as we know it, is under
attack. Children and adolescents who don’t
have practical life experiences exaggerate the possibilities of violence causing
them to act irrationally. Once fear and
imagination meet perceived danger, anything can happen.
Q: Do you believe that bullying has reached the level of a
public safety problem?
Brown: Yes. If perception is someone else’s reality, then the
responses we see being played out in the news, now become a bullying victim’s option.
As a survivor of bullying, I never thought about homicide or suicide,
but I wanted the taunting, pushing, and fear to stop. In retrospect, who knows what I would have
done if I was confronted with the fear faced by today’s youth. It has become too commonplace that a simple
fight I would have had forty years ago, now can end with someone dying. If the environment has become this
incendiary, then bullying definitely has become a public safety problem.
Q: What do you believe are solutions to bullying?
Brown: In my current research, I state that bullying is a
terroristic relationship between two or more disempowered individuals. The bully lacks power outside of physical
force. He either suffers from low self-esteem from lack of support and guidance
or is socially inept. The victim of
bullying suffers from low self-esteem, self-consciousness, and fails to assert himself
out of fear. Both are engaged in a
symbiotic relationship where needs are not being met in their emotional lives. As
a result, I talk about the three (3) aspects of power-direct, indirect, and
consolidated. Since the youth in many communities resemble the characters in
the TV show “The Little Rascals,” where parents or authority figures are rarely
around, bullying victims have to leverage at least one of these aspects of
power to become free of bullying.
Q: What do direct, indirect, and consolidated power mean?
Brown: Direct power is the ability to meet oppositional
power head on. You cannot bully a person
who is physically and psychologically equal to would-be bullies. Indirect power is using older
siblings, powerful friends, and allies to be perceived as possessing power. The
individual has power through these alliances, but rarely has to use them when
everyone has been put on notice about his support system. And consolidated power
is similar to indirect power, but is used as a way of leveraging knowledge and skills. With consolidated power, an individual who is
a math tutor for the high school football team, becomes a valuable resource to
that team. As such, the team protects
the asset that allows them to get good grades to play football. Consolidated
power uses psychological persuasion to ward off would-be bullies.
Q: In your latest book, How to Keep the World From Bullying You..., you mention that as children and
adolescents become older, their physical challenges become more psychological.
What do you mean by this?
Brown: My Aunt Ann once told me that as a person gets older,
his battles transition from physical to psychological ones. If a child or adolescent never learns assertiveness
and self-confidence, he will grow up to be pushed around in personal and
professional relationships. This pushing shows up in unrequited love
relationships, the butt of employee jokes, and blatant disrespect in social
settings. The individual’s power is still being usurped, although not in a
physical form. Once an individual
becomes more assertive and self-confident, the world views and treats him
differently. He uses voice, posture, and defiance as psychological weapons.
Q: It has been said that some people who become police
officers use their power as a result of early bullying. Do you believe this is
true?
Brown: As a former Atlanta police officer, I have seen cases
when this was true. If I had not reinvented
myself by becoming more assertive and self-confident in college, I might have
been one of them. Becoming a police
officer is the ultimate in direct and indirect power. An individual officer has
the power to take life and liberty as well as call for back up (indirect) when
situations warrant. The officers I knew who used their power unwisely, and in
some instances illegally, were eventually weeded out. Their sense of
powerlessness eventually caught up with them.
To view the book, How to Keep the World From Bullying You:
Becoming More Assertive & Self-Confident for Smart and Gifted Students on Amazon Kindle, go
to: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00IFVNDAU
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