Sunday, May 3, 2015

Pink Shirt Day - Help To Prevent Bullying

 PINK SHIRT DAY – FRIDAY 22 MAY
Pink Shirt Day is a bullying awareness campaign that gets
people talking about bullying and taking action against it.
By wearing pink on Pink Shirt Day, people around N.Z.
stand together and make a commitment to prevent and
respond to bullying. It’s a great opportunity to discuss
what bullying is, what to do about it and how to get help.
We would like everyone to wear pink and or bring a gold

coin donation to support this good cause on this day.

To help prevent bullying we first need to understand what it is...



What is Bullying?

Definitions of bullying

Bullying is when a person or a group repeatedly and intentionally uses or abuse their power to intimidate, hurt, oppress or damage someone else. It can be covert or cyber-based (happening online through social networks or even through mobile phones). Bullying can be physical or emotional.
According to the National Centre Against Bullying, there are five different kinds of bullying behaviour. They are:
1. Physical bullying: when physical actions such as hitting, poking, tripping or pushing, are used to hurt and intimidate. Repeatedly and intentionally damaging someone's belongings is also physical bullying, says the centre.
2. Verbal bullying: involves the use of negative words, like name calling, insults, homophobic or racist slurs, or words used to intentionally upset someone.
3. Social bullying: when lies, the spreading of rumours or nasty pranks are used. This includes repeated mimicking and deliberate exclusion.
4. Psychological bullying: involves the repeated and intentional use of words or actions which can cause psychological harm. Examples include intimidation, manipulation and stalking.
5. Cyber bullying: this is the big one at the moment and is when technology is used to verbally, socially or psychologically bully. It can occur in chat rooms, on social networking sites, through emails or on mobile phones.

Bullying isn't 

  • mutual arguments and disagreements
  • single episodes of social rejection or dislike
  • single-episode acts of nastiness or spite
  • random acts of aggression or intimidation

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