Bullying
Cyberbullying
Random
Teasing v Bullying
Bystander Intervention
100

True or False: Students who are bullied in school are usually at tentative with good attendance.

False:

  • Students targeted by bullies sometimes avoid school or have trouble concentrating. They can also develop personality disorders like depression and anxiety. Studies show that most of those who bully have confidence and high self-esteem
100

True or False: You can escape bullying once you are at home. 

False: Bullying follows you everywhere, there is no escape from it, once something is out there on the internet, it is forever.

100

Who is one person we can tell if we are being bullied?

Teacher

guidance counselor

parents


100

A friends says to you one time "your shirt is ugly."

Teasing

100

What is a bystander?

A person who witnesses an incident but does not take part. They have the potential to make a positive difference in a bullying situation.

200

True or False: If you are being bullied it is best to handle it alone.

False: Putting an end to bullying requires a commitment from everyone in a school, including teachers, custodians, students, administrators, cafeteria workers and crossing guards. You should seek adult intervention and try to stay among friends if you are being bullied.

200

What is cyber bullying?

Cyberbullying is when a child or teenager is harassed, humiliated, embarrassed, threatened or tormented using digital technology. It is not limited to the internet and also emcompasses text messages on cell phones

200

What is my dogs name?

Ruger! 

200

At lunch, a classmates steals your food every day.

  • Bullying
200

What are the 2 types of bystanders?

Active and passive 
300

What are two reasons why cyber bullying is a serious problem?

  • It can happen 24 hours a day, usually messages are meaner because someone is not saying it to anothers face, the victims may not know who is sending the messages, teens may think text bullying is anonymous and they won’t get caught
300

Name 3 specific things a person can be cyber bullied through.

  • Text messages, Facebook, Email, Instagram, using someone else's profile to spread rumors or lies
300

What percentage of 4th-8th graders report being a victim of bullying?

90 percent of 4th through 8th graders report being victims of bullying

300

You and a friend are frequenlty "play fighting" at recess


Teasing becasue you are both equally engaging in the behavior

300

What are the 5 C's of bystander intervention?

Check in with them

Change the space

Call in support

Collect evidence

Challenge the bullying 

400

Name 3 types of bullying other than cyber bullying

  • Verbal bullying, texting bullying, School bullying, workplace bullying, parental bullying, or Physical bullying
400

What is the social media platform most used for cyber bullying?

Instagram 

400

What is one thing you might to as an upstander or active bystander?

Tell the bully to stop

Remove the person from the situation

Get help 

400

A classmate calls you an unkind word one time

Teasing

400

What stops someone from being bullied?

•Fear that they will be bullied

•Fear they will make the problem worse

•Believe that it isn’t their place to intervene

•Believe someone else will intervene

•They don’t want to get their friend in trouble

•They just want to fit in

500

What is bullying?

•Bullying is unwanted, aggressive behavior among school aged children that involves a real or perceived power imbalance.

⚬Repeated

⚬Deliberate

⚬Hurtful

500

What percentage of US teenagers reported experiencing bullying or harassment online? 

59% in 2024

500

What is one thing I do for my job?

Counseling

Prevention Education

Go to court 

500

What is the difference between teasing and bullying?

Teasing is when both people are joking and neither gets their feelings hurt, and bullying is when it goes on more than once, it’s impactful and hurts someone, there’s a power imbalance, and it’s intentional (on purpose)

500

What do you do if you are being bullied?

Ignore it or laugh it off, but if it continues: 

• Stand up for yourself, if you feel safe doing so

• Power in numbers

• Tell a teacher, parent, guidance counselor, principal