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Banishing Bullying Behavior challenges students, parents,
educators, education support professionals, administrators,
counselors, and policy makers to confront the culture of cruelty
that is devastating our society. This book is filled with insights,
personal stories, anecdotal material, and strategies that are
directed to the widest audience possible. It urges us to become
change agents and empower children to transform their pain, rage,
and revenge to empathy, kindness, and healing. Fried and Sosland
tackle the demanding questions about physical, verbal, emotional,
sexual, cyber, sibling, and even summer camp bullying. What sets
this book apart is Chapter Eleven, "the Student Empowerment
Session," which focuses on giving students ownership of the problem
and the solutions. Anti-bullying legislation and school policies
are essential supports, but we must change the hearts, attitudes,
and behavior of students. President Obama said it well, "Bullying
is not normal and it is not inevitable." The implication of that
statement is daunting but not impossible. Banishing Bullying
Behavior will inspire you to prevent peer abuse and intervene
effectively when necessary.
Fried and Sosland bring their combined experiences together to
present a blueprint to reduce the pain, rage and revenge cycle of
bullying. Their strategies have been captured from hands-on
interaction with educators, parents and students. Their premise
comes from the apocryphal village that is being ravaged by
dysentery. Do you treat each person for their intestinal disorders
or do you put in a sewer system? Do you work with each individual
student or do you change a culture that hosts cruelty. Can you do
both? The core of the book is the Student Empowerment Session that
has been crafted and refined over fifteen years. This carefully
organized, powerful system of questions has effected dramatic
changes in children's insights about their behavior. The book also
explores topics which include cyberbullying, children with
disabilities, "mean girls," teachers who are bullies, parents who
refuse to accept that their children are bullies, and academic vs.
social emotional learning concerns to help readers change the
culture and banish bully behavior.
Until now, bullying was either dismissed as a phase or viewed as a
rite of passage for youth. In this timely and thought provoking
book, authors SuEllen Fried and Dr. Paula Fried explore the effects
of bullying on children and provide suggestions to end the cycle of
child-to-child violence. Filled with personal stories from children
and packed with practical ideas for parents, teachers and students,
the authors examine every aspect of what we now know is a serious
problem. Here are strategies for ending this hostility and treating
its many victims.
Banishing Bullying Behavior challenges students, educators,
parents, and policy makers. The purpose is to confront the culture
of cruelty that permeates our society and is seeping into our
schools. This book is filled with insights, anecdotal material, and
strategies. It requires that we become change agents and empower
our children to transform pain, rage, and revenge to empathy,
kindness, and healing.
Fried and Sosland bring their combined experiences together to
present a blueprint to reduce the pain, rage and revenge cycle of
bullying. Their strategies have been captured from hands-on
interaction with educators, parents and students. Their premise
comes from the apocryphal village that is being ravaged by
dysentery. Do you treat each person for their intestinal disorders
or do you put in a sewer system? Do you work with each individual
student or do you change a culture that hosts cruelty. Can you do
both? The core of the book is the Student Empowerment Session that
has been crafted and refined over fifteen years. This carefully
organized, powerful system of questions has effected dramatic
changes in children's insights about their behavior. The book also
explores topics which include cyberbullying, children with
disabilities, 'mean girls, ' teachers who are bullies, parents who
refuse to accept that their children are bullies, and academic vs.
social emotional learning concerns to help readers change the
culture and banish bully behavior.
"Both broad and deep, this thoughtful overview of a common problem"
("Library Journal") explores the context of teasing and the power
relationships between children, as well as the roles of adults,
schools, the media, and society at large.
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