Schools

Bullying Prevention Month In Perryville

October is National Bullying Prevention Month; Cecil County Public Schools has tools students and parents can use to report bullying.

CECIL COUNTY, MD — Over the past year Patch has been focusing on bullying and cyberbullying, a confounding crisis that can have deadly consequences. With each story, we've heard poignant reflections from Patch readers in Maryland and across the country who were bullied, including many who continue to struggle with the damage done by bullies to their self-esteem.

Common threads emerged in emails from our readers: Some said schools need to do more to foster an anti-bullying culture. Others chimed in that parents should talk more with kids about bullying and keep closer tabs on their social media habits. And in a loud chorus, they said we must create a world safe from bullying.

That's one of the purposes of National Bullying Prevention Month, observed annually during October to bring attention to the problem and involve people in Maryland and nationwide in a conversation on how to create a world safe from bullying.

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Reporting Bullying In Cecil County Public Schools

Cecil County Public Schools has website on bullying and offers a form to report bullying online.

There is a brochure on "Bullying Harassment, and Intimidation put out by the school system that defines bullying.

Find out what's happening in Perryvillefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"Bullying has two key components: repeated harmful acts and an imbalance of power," according to the brochure. "Bullying involves repeated physical, verbal, or psychological attacks or intimidation directed against a victim."

1 In 5 Students Bullied: A Public Health Issue

Once viewed as a childhood "rite of passage" that toughened kids to handle the pressures of adulthood, bullying and its more insidious digital twin, cyberbullying, is seen by many experts as a major public health issue — on par with heart disease, cancer and diabetes — with devastating and often long-term effects like the loss of self-esteem, heightened anxiety and depression.


We want to hear from you. Do you have a story to tell about bullying or cyberbullying, a suggestion about how to stem it or an event to publicize?

Comment at the end of the story, or email elizabeth.janney@patch.com and copy bullies@patch.com.

You can also post events about National Bullying Prevention Month on Patch.


Statistics vary, but an aggregate of 80 different studies on bullying suggests one in five American students between 12 and 18 is bullied at some point during their middle or high school years. Traditional bullying — name calling, public humiliation, isolation, physical violence and that sort of thing — occurs most often, with 35 percent of kids reporting they've been targeted in one of those ways. The studies cited by the PACER Center, which established National Bullying Prevention Month, show that 15 percent of kids surveyed report being cyberbullied.

And though it occurs less often, cyberbullying — which has resulted in a disturbing string of suicides by adolescents and teenagers — is especially hard to stop. While experts say most cyberbullied kids don't kill themselves, the long-tailed internet makes a taunt live longer than one flung on the schoolyard. Kids can escape traditional bullying in the safety of their homes, but because social media is so intertwined with how kids communicate, they never really escape it.


READ: Bullied To Death: When Kids Kill With Words


And because cyberbullies have the stealth of anonymity, "empathy tends to fade to zero," NoBully.org founder Nicholas Carlisle told Patch.

He was knocked around 40 or so years ago as an awkward 12-year-old. The torment persisted through high school, but as tough as it was, his experience was markedly different from the torture kids endure today, he says — and it's not just that he was attacked in a physical as opposed to online space.

"Online, you can't see the whites of their eyes," Carlisle said. "If you can see someone, that's often a break upon people's aggression — not always, but it does seem to have some break upon crossing the line."

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The full consequences of bullying on the brain aren't fully understood, but kids who are targeted by bullies in childhood and adolescence are at increased risk for psychological problems that can stretch into adulthood, according to experts. In the moment, bullied kids may be unable to sleep or suffer a range of stomach issues and headaches. Later on, they're at risk for depression, anxiety, and alcohol and drug use.

October 24 Is Unity Day

Among the marquee National Bullying Prevention Month activities is Unity Day, observed on Wednesday, Oct. 24, when everyone is encouraged to wear and show orange to send a message that no child should ever experience bullying.

"Orange provides a powerful, visually compelling expression of solidarity," Paula Goldberg, the executive director of the PACER Center, said in a statement. "Whether it's hundreds of individuals at a school wearing orange, store owners offering orange products or a community changing a landmark to orange, the vibrant statement becomes a conversation starter, sending the supportive, universal message that bullying is never acceptable behavior."

Here's more about Unity Day:


The Bully Menace: What's Ahead

During October and beyond, several experts have agreed to answer readers' questions about bullying, ranging from how to keep their kids from becoming targets to what to do if their kids are the bullies. We'll also delve into some of the issues surrounding bullying.

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