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Growing number of teens falling victim to cyberbullying

25 Feb

It is the kind of torment that no parent would want their child to endure. Cyberbullying can and does lead to suicide. Special laws have now been passed to try and deal with this relatively new phenomenon, which affects an estimated 50 percent of all teenagers at one time or another.

That’s because the Internet is now part of our daily routine. But increasingly, online communications cause severe trauma. Take the case of Jessi Slaughter, a young girl whose You Tube video that has gone viral. It shows her crying hysterically, telling her peers to “stop hating.”

Young people with unfettered access to the Internet are often going on the attack. The consequences can be devastating, especially for 11-year-old Slaughter.

Her video continues with as her dad intervenes, saying “I know who is doing it and you’ve been reported to the cyber police… you will be arrested.”

The girl’s tears are a reflection of a social pressure that is unimaginable for those who grew up before the inter net. Experts say as many as one in five teenagers have been bullied online.

Bullies have changed from brawny to brainy, according to Dr. Kimberly Mason, a UNO cyberbully expert.

“It’s not the strongest guy anymore,” she said. “It’s the smartest one who knows how to use the technology most.”

Facebook has become the school yard where most teenagers, as well as adults, gather to socialize. Teenagers chat virtually non-stop about who is in, and who is out. But many times, they attack one another.

The problem is made worse because many young people no longer communicate face to face, where they learn to read other people’s reactions to what they say.

“It can be a train wreck for them,” Mason explained. “They don’t develop those skills.”

And teenage girls are twice as likely to cyberbully as boys. Fallout from typed words emailed to hundreds of friends can be devastating.

“That’s why we’re seeing an increase that doubles if they have a social networking site because they have instant access and everyone’s on that site,” Mason said.

In Massachusetts, six students were charged with bullying a 15-year-old girl via Facebook, prior to her suicide.

In Ohio, an 18 year-old girl killed herself after her ex-boyfriend sent out nude photos of her. Louisiana teens are being tormented too.

“My daughter is 12 years-old. She’s spent the last two years with stomach pains because she was worried about what she would face in school,” said Pamela Para during a 2010 Louisiana legislative education committee meeting.

Counselors say threats should be taken seriously in order to prevent teen suicides.

“It’s still the third leading cause of deaths among teenagers in this country,” Mason said.

Cyberbullying has become so bad that Louisiana has passed laws requiring schools to become actively involved. But the response rate has been minimal.

Mason says the laws have not been fully implemented.

Louisiana’s cyberbullying law was passed in 2010, after urging from a cyberbully victim from St. John parish.

The law requires every school in Louisiana to establish a cyberbullying policy, setting up a mechanism for investigating cyberbullyiing incidents. But some say only one in 20 schools are following the law.

“That’s always a concern, but if it’s not happening by next year, everyone should be in compliance,” said state Rep. John LaBruzzo, R-Metairie.

In spite of the new law, civil court may be a victim’s parent’s best option.

“If they’re not in compliance then parents are going to be in a position and have an advantage legally,” LaBruzzo said.

There are several programs that help parents monitor their kids’ inter net activities, including cyberbully alert.

“If you’re at work, you can get a message about what your child is doing,” Mason said.

If your girl or boy has been victimized, Crimestoppers has set up Operation Safe Schools.

“When we get a bullying complaint we send it to the school and possibly law enforcement,” said New Orleans Crimestoppers director Darlene Cusanza.

Experts say the investigation should be conducted through one-on-one interviews. Conflict resolution, where you place the bully with the victim, is not recommended.

“It makes matters worse,” Mason warned.

The laws will likely get tougher. One is now being considered to set up a statewide cyberbully reporting network.

The stakes are high, and parents everywhere are now on notice about the psychological dangers lurking in their child’s computer networks.

http://www.fox8live.com/news/local/story/Growing-number-of-teens-falling-victim-to/Yhc_O_QAd0-6v6l3DxAJyQ.cspx?rss=2085

Psychologist: Deaths point to dangers of cyberbullying

30 Jan

Thanks to the way teenagers rely on the Internet for their socializing, “Dear Diary” has turned into “Dear Everyone.”

As a byproduct, teens now use computers, cell phones, BlackBerrys and other technology to cyberbully without considering the moral consequences of their actions.

That was the main point of clinical psychologist Emily D. Moore’s Wednesday-night presentation, “Cyberbullying in the Facebook Age,” at Santa Fe Preparatory School. Though the event was open to the public, only about 20 people — presumably parents — attended.

Cyberbullying — in which perpetrators use technology to harass, threaten, humiliate or even “out” someone — has been a common topic in the media in the past six months “because of all the deaths,” Moore said.

Last September, Tyler Clementi, a New Jersey college student, jumped of the George Washington Bridge after his roommate allegedly posted a video of Clementi having sex on the Internet. In 2005, Jeffrey Johnston hanged himself after being continually harangued online for being gay, even though he wasn’t (his tormentor was, Moore said). Jessica Logan committed suicide in the summer of 2008 after her ex-boyfriend texted photos of her nude to fellow students.

In the past, a victim could conceivably escape bullying by transferring to another school, Moore noted. That’s not possible today.

“The Internet is everywhere,” Moore said.

Often teens engage in cyberbullying in retaliation for a slight, or out of boredom. Some are simply power-hungry, like the old-fashioned schoolyard bully.

The fact that the victim is invisible, and that many computer users believe the Internet ensures them anonymity, makes the offense even easier to commit, because teens often see real life and online life as two very separate worlds.

Proxy bullying can take place when someone hacks into a woman’s private information (name, address, phone number, website), and sends out a mass e-mail missive to potential predators, saying the victim is a good-time girl waiting for a call.

In other cases, the situation can become like America’s Funniest Home Videos, only without the participant’s permission. Teens videotape one another in embarrassing situations and then text (or sext, if the images are provocative) those images to friends.

Still, children may be wary of telling their folks they are being cyberbullied, Moore stressed — particularly if they feel that Mom and Dad will pull the plug on computer privileges.

That tactic won’t work well, Moore said — “It’d be like taking away the keys to the car and saying to your kid, ‘You’re never going to drive.’ ”

However, parents can draw up an Internet-use agreement with their children. This should be done early on, Moore said, with kids understanding they can only use the computer for so many hours and for certain purposes, and with Mom promising she won’t overreact if her daughter opens up about being bullied or about inappropriate usage of the computer.

Parents need to build and maintain open communication and a relationship of trust with their children on this issue, Moore said. Parents should emphasize the need for teens to take moral responsibility for their actions as well.

Moore said teens are always going to outmaneuver their parents when it comes to using technology. Still, parents possess influential resources.

“Remind them that you will be part of their life forever, and ask for their respect and love and trust on that level,” she said. Also, remind children, “I’m going to be Googling you regularly until you are 18.”

Other practical tips for dealing with cyberbullying: Save and print out the offending documents for evidence (and do not respond via e-mail as the bully can use that evidence against you), and draw your child into the conversation about how to proceed. Don’t confront the bully’s parents without gaining your offspring’s cooperation, for instance.

And if the incident involves the school, parents have the right to demand accountability from principals, head learners and directors.

Jim Leonard, head of school for Santa Fe Prep, said he knows of fewer than 10 incidents of cyberbullying involving the school in the past five years. In each incident, school officials intervened, and there has not been one incident of repeat behavior, he said.

Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.

http://www.santafenewmexican.com/SantaFeNorthernNM/Psychologist--Deaths-point-to-dangers-of-cyberbulling