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School Bullying

Tools for Avoiding Harm and Liability

Take legally sound actions to create a school environment that is safe for all children.

The McGrath SUCCEED System outlined in this excellent text offers school leaders tools and strategies to create legally and ethically based practical approaches to dealing with and preventing bullying in schools. This proven method addresses the issues of:

  • Distinguishing bullying from acceptable student behavior
  • Applying legally fit procedures and maintaining proper documentation
  • Acting with honesty, compassion, and accountability
  • Fostering trust, respect, understanding, and a commitment to growth
  • Offering practices that put fundamental ethical principles into action

Full description


Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12
  • ISBN: 9781412915724
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2006
  • Page Count: 248
  • Publication date: September 01, 2006

Price: $40.95

Price: $40.95
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Description

Description

"There are many books and state/federal publications on bullying; however, the integration of legal mandates and guidelines with direct application is quite rare. This text offers a valuable and unique cross-discipline resource with its thorough review of legislative precedents."
--Diana Joyce, School Psychologist, University of Florida

"Educators rarely receive this kind of detailed legal information in their graduate school studies. When people purchase this book, it will be like having their own lawyer sitting right next to them."
--Steve Hutton, Professional Development Specialist, Mayerson Academy, Cincinnati, OH

Take legally sound steps to create a school environment that is safe for all students.

Every hour of every day, students experience bullying and harassment at school by their peers. The immediate and long-term impact on the victims' learning capabilities, emotional health, and self-esteem is staggering. School Bullying: Tools for Avoiding Harm and Liability tackles this critical problem with an easy-to-use framework that guides educators in using constructive thinking, listening, and speaking to take effective action.

The McGrath SUCCEED® System outlined in this excellent text offers school leaders tools to create lasting, legally based, and ethically sound approaches to dealing with, and preventing, bullying in schools. This proven method covers both the content and context of bullying. You'll be able to address these issues:

  • Distinguishing bullying from acceptable student behavior
  • Applying legally appropriate procedures and maintaining proper documentation
  • Acting with honesty, compassion, and accountability
  • Fostering trust, respect, understanding, and a commitment to growth
  • Offering practices that put fundamental ethical principles into action

This resource is vital to all schools, providing not only step-by-step procedures but also practical tools for investigating bullying situations and communicating effectively with students, parents, teachers, staff, and the community.


Key features

- Easy to use framework and analytical strategies

- Proven method for sustaining success

- Combines a legal base with a principled, and humanistic approach to problem-solving

Author(s)
Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

About the Author

Part I: FACT, MYTH AND IMPACT


1. What Bullying Is and What it Is Not

Spotting the Bully

How Bullies Act

Intent to Harm

An Imbalance of Power

The Perpetrator Enjoys Bullying

Repeated, Systematic Behavior

Bullying Hurts

Three Types of Bullying

Piercing the Myths About Bullies and Bullying

Myth #1: Our School Doesn’t Have Bullies

Myth #2: Other Safety Issues are a Bigger Concern for Kids

Myth #3: Schools Should Not Encourage Complaints

Myth #4: Teachers See Everything and Respond When Bullying Takes Place

Myth #5: It’s the Outcasts Who Bully Others

Myth #6: Bullies Appear Tough, but They Are All Actually Anxious and Insecure

Myth #7: The “Class Bully” Is Easy to Identify

Myth #8: It Is Impossible to Catch the Early Warning Signs

Myth #9: There Is No Correlation Between Bullying and Cases of Extreme Violence

Myth #10: Bullying Is Not a Legal Issue, It’s a Character Issue

Summary

2. Through the Eyes of the Victim

The Impact of Bullying on Victims

Impacted for Life

The Effects of Chronic Trauma

Post-Traumatic Stress

Blaming the Victim

Signs and Symptoms That May Indicate a Child Is Being Bullied

Six Powerful Practices for Detecting Bullying and Harassment in Schools

Safe, Responsive Adults Are the Key

Being a Safe Adult

Being a Responsive Adult

Getting Everyone Involved

The Nature and Scope of Anti-Bullying Interventions

But Is It Legally Fit?

Legal Avenues for Effecting Change

Summary

3. Social Scheming and TechnoBullying

Mean Girls

What Does Relational Bullying Look Like?

What’s the Harm?

The Marvels of Modern Technology

Three-Way Calling Attacks

Instant Messaging

Blogging

No Privacy on the Internet

Online Impersonation

What Can Schools Do?

Why Kids Don’t Report

The Code

Changing the Adult Response

The Complex Role of the Bystander

Group Dynamics

The Role of the Defender

Shifting the Dynamic: Training Bystanders

“I’m Afraid to Walk in That Corridor”

Is Your Discipline Code Adequate?

What Does Retaliation Look Like?

Handling Graffiti

Summary

Part II: THE LEGAL CONTEXT OF BULLYING


4. Bullying Through a Legal Lens

In Loco Parentis

Three Bodies of Law

What Is a Civil Action?

What Is Criminal Law?

What Is Administrative Law?

What Is Liability?

What Is Governmental Immunity?

What Is Negligence?

Where Does Negligence Fit Under the Law?

What Is a Duty of Care?

What Is the Standard of Care in Civil Actions for Negligence?

Under What Conditions May an Individual Be Found Individually Liable?

What Qualifies As “Notice”?

How Does a School Receive Notice?

What Are Deliberate Indifference and Reckless Disregard?

What Is Discrimination?

What Is the Difference Between Bias, Prejudice, and Discrimination?

What About Students’ First Amendment Rights?

The First Amendment and Retaliation: A Case in Point

Responsibility for the Behavior of Third Parties

Who Is Considered a Third Party?

Public School Students in Employment Settings

Enactment of State Law

Summary

5. When Bullying Is Legally Actionable

The Criterion: Point by Point

Point 1: Is a Protected Classification Involved or Is There Intent to Harm?

Point 2: Is the Behavior Unwelcome or Unwanted?

Point 3: Is the Behavior Severe or Persistent or Pervasive?

Point 4: Does the Behavior Substantially Interfere With the Student's Education?

Point 5: Does the Behavior Meet Both Subjective and Objective Tests Related to Its Level of Interference With Student Education?

Quid Pro Quo Sexual Harassment: An Exception to the Five-Point Criterion

In Review

Follow Your Policy

Bullying Policy Highlights

A Cautionary Note: The Importance of Being Strategic

Your Duty to Provide a Save Environment: The Courts Are Speaking

Established Guidelines for Protecting Students

Four Responsibilities Under the Duty to Provide a Safe Learning Environment

Covering All the Bases

Summary

PART III: LEGALLY SOUND AND PRINCIPLED-BASED ACTION


6. Daily Practices to Conquer Bullying

And the Complaints Keep Coming…

Power Tools That Build a Positive School Culture

A Legally Sound Response

Bullying: Three Levels of Response

Level I Response: Training the Front Line

Level I Response: Documentation

Level II Response

Level III Response

The McGrath SUCCEED System

The McGrath FICA Standard: The Basic Tool

How to Evaluate Facts and Make Decisions

The McGrath FICA Standard

The FACTS: What Happened?

IMPACT: The Harm of What Happened

When Facts and Impact Do Not Correlate

CONTEXT: The Other Factors Surrounding the Situation

Context: The Supreme Court Speaks

Miss Jones Interviews Becky

ACTION: Taking the Logical Next Step

Spiraling Forward

Back to Mr. Pogue

McGrath FICA in Review

Implementing the FICA Chat Infrastructure

Summary

7. Powered By Principles

The "Be" and the "Do" of Conquering Bullying

Why Trust, Respect, Understanding, and Growth?

Facts With Trust

Impact With Respect

Context With Understanding

Action With Growth

Four Lenses: Structure, Quality, Tone, and Balance

Structure Counts

Quality: Be Specific and Factual

Tone: The Relationship Factor

Balance: Working the FICA Formula With Integrity

It’s All About Relationship

The McGrath SUCCEED Levels of Mastery

A Transformational Approach

The Heart of the Matter

What It Takes To Be a Partner

Turning the Mirror Inward

The McGrath SUCCEED System as a Guide for Self-Reflection

The Internal “Imposter”

The Personal Awareness Paradox

The Questing Person

Being a Partner: Shared Vision

The Sociopath Next Door: A Notable Exception

No Matter How Mean the Streets

You Can SUCCEED

Lead With Your Heart

Summary

8. A Legally Sound "To Do" List

The Content of Bullying Through the Legal Lens

Initial Intake of Complaints: Preliminary Steps

The Role of the Complaint Manager

Processing Incident Reports From Third Parties

If the Complainant Cannot Read and/or Write English Proficiently

Complaint Intake With Very Young Students

Informing the Parents

Should You Audiotape the Child’s Answers?

Completing the Conversation With the Complainant

Don’t Be Afraid of Documentation

Deciding Who Investigates

Handing Off a Complaint to an Investigator

First Things First: Eight Preliminary Considerations

1. Take Action on the Complaint Within 24 Hours

2. If Sexual Harassment is Suspected, Use Two Investigators

3. Create a Confidential File

4. Conduct Interviews in a Private Room

5. Review All Pertinent Records

6. Review and Follow All Aplicable Policies, Rules, and Regulations

7. Talk to the Teachers With Whom the Parties Attend Classes

8. Do Not Limit the Investigation to Interviews of the Complainant and Alleged Perpetrator

Informal Versus Formal Resolution

A Working Definition of “Informal”

“Talking It Out”

Anonymity

Informal Does Not Mean Unwritten

What Is an Inquiry?

An Example of a Level II Matter

When Is Informal Resolution Clearly Inappropriate?

Innocent Until Proven Guilty

But I Know the Kid Is Guilty

Summary

9. Creating and Following a Game Plan: Level III Investigation

Know the “Players”

The Complaint Manager’s Role

The Response Team’s Role

Traits of an Investigator

The Title IX Coordinator

The Role of Counsel

Include All Players in the Game Plan

The Five Phases of an Investigation

Phase One: Gather the Facts

Phase Two: Check for Records of Concern

Phase Three: Evaluate the Testimony and Evidence

Phase Four: Write the Report

Phase Five: Follow-Up Actions By School Officials

Corroborative Evidence

Hearsay Evidence

Creating a McGrath Case and Report Organizer to Guide the Investigation From Start to Finish

Organize the Case File

The McGrath Case Report Organizer

Synopsis

Facts

Impact

Context

Action

Summary

10. Conclusion

Part IV: RESOURCES


Resource A: Forms

McGrath Incident Report

Complaint of Alleged Bullying or Illegal Harassment

McGrath Investigation Checklist

McGrath Template III

Resource B: Laws and Policies

Law Case Digest: A Sampler

Model Bullying Policy

Sample State Anti-Bullying Legislation

Resource C: Suggested 360-Degree Anti-Bullying Training Plan

Resource D: Glossary

Resource E: Useful Web Sites

Bibliography

Index

Reviews

Reviews

Price: $40.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

For Instructors

Request Review Copy

When you select 'request review copy', you will be redirected to Sage Publishing (our parent site) to process your request.