Thursday, December 20, 2012

Bully, Can't Change Me!



Bully, Can't Change Me!

By The Bully Blog with 1 comment

Monday, December 17, 2012

Maya Angelou, The Power of Words



Maya Angelou, "The Power of Words"

By The Bully Blog with 1 comment

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Cyber-Bullying: Tips for Parents


Cyber-Bullying: Tips for Parents

By The Bully Blog with 2 comments

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

They'll never break me (bullying) by Def Poetry Jam artist Lamont Carey




"They'll never break me"(bullying) by Def Poetry Jam artist Lamont Carey

By The Bully Blog with No comments

Monday, December 10, 2012

NO MORE BULL


A bullying awareness and prevention PSA.

By The Bully Blog with No comments

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Bentley Green - Anti Bully Song - No More Pain






(10yr. old Rapper / Actor) Bentley Green uses his voice to let Bully's know that kids are not going to let them continue. Bentley wants kids to know that they are not alone and that they need to stay true to who they are.

This is a cover of Gym Class Heroes ft. Adam Levine "Stereo Hearts"

'Stereo Hearts' as originally by Gym Class Heroes ft. Adam Levine
Written by: Adam Levine, Brandon Lowery, ; Benjamin Levin, Travis Mccoy, Daniel Omelio, Ammar Malik
Published by: EMI Music Publishing & Universal Music Publishing

LYRICS are below


Catch Bentley Green at the following ::

http://BentleyGreen.com/
http://Twitter.com/BentleyGreen
http://www.Myspace.com/BentleyGreen
http://www.Facebook.com/BentleyGreenPage
http://www.ReverbNation.com/BentleyGreen
http://www.YouTube.com/BentleyGreen


NO MORE PAIN
So you wanna bully kids and you think its cool
What if somebody bigger wanted to bully you
You like to push kids and make em hit the ground
Would you like it if somebody made you fall down
I don't i don't i don't I don't think so
You should think before you act and probably slow ya roll
Cause..what..goes..around..comes..back
In other words I bet you probably wouldn't like that
Kids if you see a bully you should stand tall
Never fear them cause they just wanna be ya'll
Never give up work hard do your best
People hate when they insecure about they self

Keep standing tall keep doing you
Never quit don't worry bout what bully's do 2x

Sometimes you win sometimes you lose
Sometimes you fall keep standing tall 2x

No more pain no more fear
I cant lose its my year

By The Bully Blog with No comments

Anti-Bully Blog's Quote of the Day


"Use your smile to change the world. Don't let the world change your smile."

By The Bully Blog with 1 comment

5 Bullying Prevention Tips for Principals






Post antibullying signs
In order to set the tone for a diverse and accepting school culture, you might consider posting diversity or bullying prevention signs around campus. This will remind students, parents, visitors and administration that bullying is not tolerated. You can order signage online for relatively cheap, or to encourage buy-in, you might even hold a school-wide contest where students submit their own custom designs and messages.


Invite diverse guest speakers
Most state standards require that students study ancient culture and civilization. Books are useful learning tools, but they have limitations, especially if we want to make content come alive for our students. Here’s an idea: Say that you are studying Eastern civilizations. Why not invite a Buddhist monk from a local temple to give a presentation on Buddhism? You could apply this to any culture or religion, really. Guest speakers not only give tangible life to the material students have been studying in their textbooks, they also bolster the fact that your school is open and accepting of all cultures.

Partner with a local college or university
Most university counseling programs require students to take a practicum, usually a semester-long supervised “course” where students put everything they’ve learned from the program into practice. Odds are that you already have a counselor on staff (at least part time), but why not take advantage of the extra help from university interns? Not only will they be earning credit hours towards graduation—which means that you won’t have to dip into your budget—they’ll also be lightening your current counselor’s work load.

With the extra help on hand, you’ll have the resources you need to conduct team meetings with parents, students and teachers; you’ll also have more resources to help monitor lunch. Intern counselors can also organize bullying prevention activities: Say, for example, that one student has misbehaved or bullied another student. The offending student could have lunch with one of the interning counselors to discuss what happened and what the student could have done differently. In addition to this, the student and counselor could collaborate to come up with an appropriate way to remedy the behavior: writing the other student a letter, for example, or drawing him or her a picture.

 Start Lunch Clubs
Another way to encourage diversity and positive friendships is to break students out of their routine and get them interacting with students outside of their inner circle. Try putting together a few different supervised activities during lunch: Mondays could be devoted to a movie in one room and karaoke in the other. Tuesdays could be devoted to dance in one room and music-making (with various instruments) in the other, etc. These activities could be facilitated by volunteer teachers or interning counselors.

Collaborate with Parents
Having the support of parents is essential to creating a positive school culture. In addition to encouraging parents to form bullying prevention committees, what if you were to conduct home visits like Larry Ferlazzo has done at his Sacremento, California high school? If that sounds unrealistic, consider the fact that Ferlazzo’s school, Luther Burbank, has over 2,000 students. In spite of this, he and his staff continue to make hundreds of visits to the homes of incoming freshman (as well as older students) who have not successfully passed the high school exit exam. Ferlazzo and his team focus on academic success, but there’s no reason that you couldn’t talk to parents about school culture, diversity and bullying at the same time.


By The Bully Blog with 1 comment

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