Bullying in schools Using a realistic novel to address bullying in schools
Darkland.
That's what the seventh and eighth graders in The Revealers call their school, whose official name is Parkland Middle School ... and that's how a real middle school can feel, all too often, to the kids in it. "It's not so much the schoolthe school is okay, I guess," writes one character in The Revealers. "It's the way kids treat you in it."
Bullying in schools is most severe and most damaging, studies are showing, at the middle school level. This is the time to interveneand because this novel is a realistic, suspenseful story that is not judgmental and has many points of entry, working with The Revealers can have a powerful, positive impact on raising awareness and changing the culture of a middle school. What's key is to bring your own creativity to your project with the book.
Here are four powerful ideas, drawn from many schools' experience, for making a book reading and discussion the focal point of a school's bullying prevention strategy:
- Involve all teachers, even the whole school staff, in the reading and discussion project.
- Seek support and participation from prominent community citizens and organization leaders (ask to record them reading a chapter; invite them to an evening forum; ask them to share their own bullying stories with students).
- Challenge students to do creative projectsmake dramatic videos, do posters, write their own new endings to the bookbased on The Revealers and/or on other realistic bullying experiences.
- Use the Internet to stimulate sharing and discussioncreate a blog or other online discussion site. (See "How a school's "Webboard" drew hundreds of student entries")
To help, here's a rich selection of ideas and inspiration, along with useable materials:
More good resources
- www.clemson.edu/olweus/:
U.S. site for the Olweus Bullying Prevention Program, a comprehensive, school-wide program developed in Norway for use in elementary, middle or junior high schools.
- www.nobully.org.nz/:
A school-based "No Bully" program from New Zealand.
- www.reportbullying.com:
Motivational speaker Jim Jordan has created presentations "that reach to the root of the bullying in schools."
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Devin Laramie middle schooler
C.J. Bott, author of The Bully in the Book and the Classroom
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