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Elk Township Girl Scouts take a stand on bullying at Aura School

28 May

DSCN1902.JPGView full sizeAura School-based Girl Scout Troop #62499 asked Elk Township Police Officer Cpl. Ed Gonnelli to talk to classmates about the consequences of bullying for adults. The talk was part of an anti-bullying rally planned and paid for by the troop, who were bullied for wearing their Girl Scout uniforms to school.

ELK TWP. – After a first-hand brush with bullies, an Aura School-based Girl Scout troop won’t stand for bullying anymore.

The group of 10 second- and third-grade girls took a stand against bullies on May 20 with a school-wide presentation on the damage hurtful comments can do, and how to deal with a classmate who takes teasing too far.

“They decided to end bullying at Aura School for every child, forever,” said Kay Bessette, leader of Troop 62499.

The anti-bullying presentation coined a new phrase – “Stop, talk and walk” – that Aura School’s kindergarten-through-grade-six children chanted during the assembly.

The Girl Scouts planned and paid for the rally that taught their classmates to stop whatever they’re doing when a bully starts to pick on them. Then walk away, and talk to an adult right away.

The same set of rules goes for the bully, the girls said.

Stop making hurtful remarks, walk away from the person they’re picking on, and talk to an adult about why they needed to make fun of a classmate.

DSCN1911.JPGView full sizeA Girl Scout with Troop #62499 reads signatures on the “Anti-Bullying Club” poster.

The Girl Scout troop-initiated bullying event was the brain child of the 10 girls who attend the school. They were picked on for wearing their uniforms to school on days the group met after school.

“They bullied us whenever we got dismissed for Girl Scouts,” said third-grader Emma Romagnolia, 7. “They said, ‘You should be broccoli scouts because cookies make you fat.’”

The girls reported the incidents to Troop Leader Bessette, and decided not to retaliate against the bullies. Instead, they would try to make a difference in the way their classmates treat each other.

The presentation cost the troop more than $500 to put on. The girls raised the funds through Girl Scout Cookie sales, according to Bessette.

“They had a choice. They could have chosen to go horseback riding, or do ceramics,” Bessette said. “But they chose this. That’s what’s so inspiring.”

The girls wrote skits that showed how bullies treat other people, and how to handle being bullied. The students in the audience were quizzed at the end of each skit to make sure they understood the “stop, walk and talk” concept. The cookie funds bought prizes – “Stop. Talk. Walk.” T-shirts – and treated the classmates to ice cream.

The troop also invited Elk Township Police Officer Cpl. Ed Gonnelli to speak about consequences of bullying as an adult.

Adults can face jail time and fines if convicted of harassment, simple assault or aggravated assault, he said.

DSCN1898.JPGView full sizeGirls Scouts who organized the anti-bullying rally sit on the front of the stage and listen to an out-of-district girl discuss her experience with a bully at another school.

“That’s how serious this is today, guys,” Gonnelli said.

Girl Scouts Gia Unfreed, 9, and Olivia Marchei, 8, hoped their program really hit home with their classmates and friends.

Gia, an Aura third-grader, hopes the students learned “not to bully, or say ‘I bully, and it’s wrong,’” she said.

“And to know not to bully any more,” third-grader Olivia added. “They (classmates) probably learned their lesson, too.”

Girl Scout Kayla Vandvelt, 8, got to see first-hand how the troop’s presentation started to make a difference. She witnessed a boy getting bullied during recess after the anti-bullying sessions, she said.

“It made me feel sad, and I told him he just got bullied,” said Kayla, in second grade. “He went inside, walked and talked.”

http://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/index.ssf/2011/05/elk_township_girl_scouts_take.html

Connecticut Girl Allegedly Bullied by Classmates Posts Plight on YouTube

30 Mar

Alye Pollack, seen here in a homemade video posted to YouTube March 14, describes the alleged bullying suffered at Bedford Middle School in Westport, Conn. (YouTube).

Alye Pollack, seen here in a homemade video posted to YouTube March 14, describes the alleged bullying suffered at Bedford Middle School in Westport, Conn. (YouTube).

A 13-year-old girl apparently bullied by her peers has taken her plight to YouTube, posting a haunting video that describes the alleged torment suffered at a top Connecticut middle school.

Alye Pollack, an eighth-grader at Bedford Middle School in Westport, Conn., uploaded the video, titled “Words are worse than Sticks and Stones,” on March 14. As of Wednesday morning, the three-minute clip had more than 30,100 views.  

Pollack, who does not speak in the homemade video, is seen holding up signs recounting the alleged bullying endured at the hands of her classmates. 

“I am bullied. Not a day has gone by without one of these words — ‘bitch,’ ‘whore,’ ‘fat, ‘lesbo,’ ‘slut,’ ‘freak,’ ugly,’ ‘weird,’ fag,” the signs read. 

“I don’t cut but I’m close,” Pollack writes. “I’m in therapy/guidance more than my classes.” 

“Think before you say things. It might save lives,” reads another sign. 

After the video was posted, the school  principal wrote in a letter to parents that he was investigating a case of cyber bullying, MyFoxNY.com reports.

The superintendent has declined comment on Pollack’s case, specifically, citing privacy reasons, according to the station.  

“We’ve been very rigid about being intolerant about bullying,” Dr. Elliott Landon told the Westport News. “If there’s any sign that a kid’s in trouble, we act on that immediately.”

Click here to read more on the alleged bullying case at Bedford Middle School from MyFoxNY.com 

Click here to see Alye Pollack’s video on YouTube 

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/03/30/connecticut-girl-allegedly-bullied-classmates-posts-plight-youtube/