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Survey Shows Impact of Bullying

10 May

Posted at: 05/09/2011 10:56 PM

By: Laura Lee

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(ABC 6 NEWS) — We’ve been following the topic of bullying for weeks now. 

According to a state survey released Monday, there’s more than a fifty percent chance a student in Minnesota has been bullied or bullied someone else.

Specialists say even though its unfortunate, the study released is not surprising and one of the biggest concerns is how bullying directly impacts student behavior.

Those whispers in the hallway can pack quite a punch.
 
“If you get negative, negative, negative all the time, over a period of time, its really going to wear on you,” says NAMI’s Executive Director Andrea Thomas.

And according to the survey, out of 130 thousand students surveyed, about 13 percent reported being bullied at least once a week.

“If someone is being bullied, they start to begin to believe what they are being told, its difficult to pull out of that especially if your not talking to someone about it,” says Thomas.

“When they think they can’t turn to anyone they turn to alcohol and drugs,” says Betsy Baker, who is an advocate for suicide prevention.

The study also says, students who bully or get bullied are less likely to earn A’s and B’s in school and skip school more often.

“The concentration in the class isn’t going to be the same, so then grades will go down and they will withdraw from their friends and isolate themselves,” says Thomas.

“Worst case scenario, when mental illness starts to present anxiety and depression, it can result in suicide,” says Baker.”
    
And the recent local student suicide deaths in the area should serve as a wake up call for everyone.
    
“I think this is a call to action, bullying is just unacceptable, these teen suicides are completely avoidable,” says Baker.

“It’s sad what happened, really unfortunate, they think they have to take care of it on their own,” says Thomas.

That’s why any intervention whether big or small, “it can be a smile, or just a how are you,” says Baker, can make the biggest impact and change the fate for anyone suffering from bullying.

“We owe it to our kids and our community,” she says.

And to help address the issue of bullying, schools like Lourdes High School is kicking off a campaign called Pause Before You Post to end cyber bullying.

Other initiatives include NAMI’s annual walk on May 14th for research and education on issues like bullying.  Baker will also be hosting a forum in the fall about bullying and it will focus on suicide prevention.

http://kaaltv.com/article/stories/S2103877.shtml?cat=10226

What high schools and restaurant reality shows have in common: bullies

4 Mar

I wonder if anyone at NBC Entertainment watches any of the shows on NBC News or vice-versa. If so, Sunday night might be an epiphanous moment for network television, a cognitive flash of self-awareness that could jolt American culture in the direction of human decency.

Well, yes, I do understand I’m talking about the same network that aired “Fear Factor,” “The Weakest Link” and “My Mother The Car.” But it could happen. It could.

OK, OK, it probably won’t. But dreaming is cheap. And the contrast between Sunday’s episode of “Dateline NBC” about bullies and the reality-competition show that follows it is so dramatic that even a segment of the population as intellectually vacuous and emotionally retarded as network programmers ought to get it.

“America’s Next Great Restaurant” might have been a mildly interesting entry in the reality field. Four chefs and restaurateurs judge the proposals and performance of 21 contestants seeking funding to open a small fast-food chain. Some of the ideas, admittedly, range from loony to disturbing: A combination gun store and cafe? A place featuring “lactation smoothies”? A Hooters for the opposite sex called Peckers?

Others, however, are intriguing. I’d love to visit a joint featuring tacos with fillings like jalapeno crabcake or an all-pot pie place with flavors like Philly cheese steak. And listening to the judges chat about potential marketing or cooking problems with the contestants is pretty interesting. Would a restaurant with nothing but grilled-cheese sandwiches on the menu be able to turn out the product on a fast-food timetable? Have enough Americans sworn off meat to make a vegetarian fast-food chain worth a try?

But “America’s Next Great Restaurant” is quickly undone by the same mean-spiritedness that makes “Survivor,” “American Idol” and the rest of this genre such an unpleasant viewing experience. Winning depends at least as much (and probably much more) on impressing the producers with television skills as it does on winning over the judges with culinary expertise or business savvy. So taunting and back-biting among the contestants is a dreary constant.

And the judges, whatever their restaurant acumen, are out-and-out louts, smirking and ridiculing their way through the shows like the cross-bred bastards of Gordon Ramsay and Donald Trump. One is Miami’s Lorena Garcia, who maintains South Florida’s near-perfect record of contributing nothing to national television, but she’s far from the worst. That would surely be the Brit chef Curtis Stone, whose surly abuse of contestants is all the more untoward for his utter ignorance of American cuisine. How did a guy who’s never heard of banana cream pie manage to get a job as a judge on a show like this?

The answer is supplied in the hour before “America’s Next Great Restaurant” airs. “Bullies love an audience,” declares one of the experts interviewed by “Dateline NBC’s” Kate Snow for a disquieting but perhaps hopeful episode titled “My Kid Would Never Bully.”

Though it includes some insightful conversations with such people as Rosalind Wiseman (whose book “Queen Bees and Wannabes” was the basis for the film “Mean Girls”), this report is much more than a compendium of talking heads. Its most compelling moments make use of hidden cameras to record the reactions of teenagers when they observe other kids being bullied. Unknown to them, the bullies and their victims are unpaid actors. Another thing they don’t know: Their own mothers are watching on video monitors in another room.

In some ways, the results are heartening. Almost all the unsuspecting kids react against the bullies when they start mocking a skinny, unathletic boy as a “queerbag” or trashing an overweight girl for wearing horizontal stripes. Some try to distract the bullies; others are openly confrontational. It quickly becomes apparent that if just one kid will speak out against the bullies, others will back him up.

But there are also moments of desperation so disturbing that they’re almost impossible to watch. One girl slips quietly away to a corner of the room, where a hidden microphone picks up her tearful whisper: “It’s so hard.” It turns out she’s been the victim of bullies at her own school. After last year’s furor over the suicide of a gay college freshman tormented by his dormmates, thinking of bullying as a subset of homophobia has become common. But as “Dateline” makes clear, bullying is neither new nor necessarily related to sexual orientation: Kids for years have been victimized for walking, talking, dressing or doing almost anything else differently than the rest of the crowd.

Still, I wonder if a hidden-camera show done at my high school or junior high 40 years ago would have revealed as many kids willing to stick up for the weak or the out of step. My favorite was a girl named Lilly, who argues fiercely with the bullies and finally unleashes an F-bomb. “Nice language, daughter,” gasps her blushing but proud mother in the room down the hall.

If only we could slip Lilly onto “America’s Next Great Restaurant.”

DATELINE NBC: MY KID WOULD NEVER BULLY

7-8 p.m. EST Sunday

AMERICA’S NEXT GREAT RESTAURANT

8-9 p.m. EST Sunday

NBC

Glenn Garvin: ggarvin@MiamiHerald.com

http://www.kansascity.com/2011/03/04/2698515/what-high-schools-and-restaurant.html