Bullying

Can you imagine how awful it feels
To wake up afraid every day?
Can you imagine how lonely it feels
To feel too sad to play?
Can you imagine how you might feel
If this should happen to you?
What if others were standing by
While someone was bullying you?
Maybe it's time for us all to say
Bullying people is not okay.

BH

March 11, 2010

Boy Bullies vs. Girl Bullies (article)


How Are Boys and Girls Different in Their Bullying?

Both boys and girls use verbal aggression (such as mocking, name-calling, teasing, mean telephone calls, verbal threats of aggression) and intimidation (such as graffiti, publicly challenging someone to do something, playing a dirty trick, taking possessions, coercion) (Garrity, Jens, Porter, Sager, and Short-Camilli, 1996). Nevertheless, there are some differences.

Boy Bullies:

* Boys may bully more than girls. However, some question this.
* Boys bully both boys and girls (Olweus, 1993).
* Boys use more direct behaviors (physical and verbal bullying) than girls do. They usually use more indirect bullying as their verbal skills increase (Mullin-Rindler, 2002).
* Boys may use more physical aggression than girls (Espelage, Bosworth, & Simon, 2000; Hyde, 1986; McDermott, 1966). However, more research is needed to verify this, and the research indicates that assumptions should not be made about the nature of their aggression (Espelage & Swearer, 2004).
* Boys are just as likely as girls to use social and emotional taunting.

Girl Bullies:

* Girls are aggressive, but may use more indirect behaviors to damage relationshipsand can be sneaky and nasty.
* Girls are becoming more physical in bullying than in the past
* Girls are more likely to bully other girls, but sometimes they bully boys (Olweus, 1993).
* Girls bully in groups more than boys do.
* Girls seek to inflict psychological pain on their victims, which hurts as much as, if not more than, physical attacks and has long-lasting effects.
* Girls behave well around adults but can be cruel and mean to peers.
* Girls target weaknesses in others.
* Girls frequently make comments regarding the sexual behavior of girls they don’t like (Byrne, 1994a, 1994b).
* Girls attack within tightly knit networks of friends, which intensifies the hurt.

Source - http://bullyfree.com

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