Cyberbullying
Working with a novel to address cyberbullying in the new communications world

Cyberbullying is a huge issue—and how young people use networked communications, for good and ill, is central to The Revealers. "The promise of the modern age is that information equals power, and in Wilhelm's entertaining and throughtful tale, that notion is put to the test," Publishers Weekly wrote in reviewing the novel.

No previous human generation has had cell phones and the Internet. Today's kids are creating a new world of communication, and it is powerful. The Revealers deals with this in microcosm, by centering on how its characters use the power of a new, schoolwide computer network. The three central characters stumble on the idea of using the network (students call it "Kidnet") to uncover how kids are really treating each other in their school—and this begins to make a lot of other kids really think—but then they pass along an ugly rumor without checking it out, or thinking through what might happen.

What does happen gives readers get the chance to think and talk about the choices they're making every day, on the real Internet.

In working with The Revealers, a number of schools have chosen to use the Internet as a positive, awareness-building tool for discusing the book and for enabling students to safely share their own bullying stories. For a discussion of these creative, empowering uses, click on the first link below.

Here are some briefings on how to work with this powerful dimension of The Revealers, and of young adults' real lives:

More good resources

The Revealers is the most truthful, moving book I have ever read.
Devin Laramie
middle schooler
A valuable tool for any anti-bullying unit.
C.J. Bott, author of The Bully in the Book and the Classroom