In 2003, a fifteen years old, dropped out of school after a few of his classmates found a video of him and posted it on the internet (Harmon, 2003). Three years earlier, a fourteen year old girl hung herself after receiving threatening phone calls from classmates (CBC News Online, 2005). In the school year 2005-2007, some of eight million students said they were bullied at school, and about nine thousand or so said they were cyber-bullied. According to Dr. Shaheen Sharif of McGill University says “cyber bullying consist of being bullied through camera phones, text messages, web sites and online chat rooms”(Sharif & Gouin,2005 3). Cyber-bullying is on the rise because more children are using the computer. In 2005 a study showed that thousands of students of all ages have access to the internet. Children use the World Wide Web to chat with friends and socialize and meet new people. Even though children are still going to be bullied in the real world, a research says that thirty percent of students are being bullied; the majority is through the internet. Cyber bullying is complicated whereas the school and the police are involved. Oppose to the real world bullying occurs mostly on school grounds, teachers and principals often take action, but online bullying usually occurs off school property, being difficult for schools to step in. Often bullies pick on people who look different, homosexual, gifted or disable (Sharif & Gouin, 2005 3-4). The internet can be a perfect tool for harassing others because it offers bullies access to their victims as many times as they want. The power of the internet means the vicious messages can be seen to millions of people worldwide. The more people that get involved makes the bullying even worse. Res...
... middle of paper ...
...rovider. Victims should also ask to have their number changed and not give out to people they don’t know, just family.
Being a victim of cyber-bullying can be a scary and hurtful thing. Whenever you are being cyber-bullied always remember not to give out personal information especially over the internet, always tell a trusted person you’re being bullied and keep a track of the incidents that occur from start to finish. Remember don’t let someone scare you, intimidate you that you have to commit suicide. There’s always someone out there to help you with your situation.
Works Cited
CBC News Online (March, 2005) 18 May 2006
Harmon, A. (19 May 2003). Fame is no laughing matter for the Star Wars Kid. “New York Times” (Late Edition) Sec C. p.3
Sharif S. & Gouin, R. (2005), “School Libraries in Canada”, 2006, Vol. 25.Issue 4, p.17-22,6p
Web.ebscohost.com
The definition of bullying uses broad statements to define the actual meaning. Because of this, people may view the definition differently than others. Bullying can range from physical violence to verbal abuse to even cyberbullying. Most people do not realize how common cyberbullying actually is. Over half of teens and adolescents have been bullied online and almost the same number have engaged in the bullying (“Cyber Bullying Statistics”). Cyberbullying is becoming more and more prominent throughout this time period because of the technology continuing to expand around the world. Each year this statistic increasingly grows due to the technology
In her article “How the Internet Has Changed Bullying”, Maria Konnikova explained how bullying has reached technology, and in the workplaces of many adults. The Internet has made it harder to escape from bullying, and easier for bullies to escape from confronting their victims. Furthermore, the author stresses that cyberbullying not only targets high schoolers, but it’s affecting the lives of college students as well (Konnikova 1). Cyberbullying takes place in the Internet world where is easier for a bully to gossip and humiliate multiple of victims in a faster pace. The studies have shown that cyberbullying is making a greater impact in the victims’ and the bullies’ lives more than the traditional bullying and many people are not aware of it; therefore the schools, witnesses, and employers should work together to fight against cyberbullying and provide help to the victims and bullies.
Young children along with adults use the Internet as a doorway to push around or intimidate someone else of a different race, gender, sexual orientation, and religion or even sometimes for an unknown reason. According to DoSomething.org, approximately 43% of kids have been bullied online and nearly 75% of students admit they have used the Internet as a way to bash another student. One of the most horrific ways children deal with cyber bullying is by taking their own life. Hundreds of families each year loses their younger son, daughter, brother, sister, cousin, niece, nephew or dear friend because of the malicious, yet often disingenuous regretted words typed by
In April 2010, British school teachers took a three question survey about cyber bullying. The first question asked "have you ever been a victim of cyber bullying?" 15.1% of the teachers said yes (Doc. B). Although that's less than a seventh the British teachers surveyed, it simply cannot be ignored. The second question was "Who was the perpetrator of the cyber bullying?" 44.2% of the cyber bullied teachers said that it was a student who had bullied them while 18.3% of the teachers said it was a colleague. (Doc. B). However, 41.9% didn't even know who the perpetrator was (Doc. B). The last question of the survey asked "how did the bullying affect you?" 38.6% of the teachers who had been bullied said that it reduce their confidence and self-esteem
Nowadays, cyber bullying is growing to a big problem due to the development of the internet. Some teens even commit suicide from cyber bullying.
Track back to 15 to 25 years ago. An unfortunate student would normally get bullied at school with physical acts of violence, but as soon as that student arrives at his home he or she is presumed safe. Cyber bullying does not allow this luxury. Cyber bullying occurs over the information waves of the internet, with sites such as Facebook, Twitter, and Google plus. Which is why the guidelines must be improved or that children should not be allowed to access such sites entirely. With a the tools of direct messaging and posting videos cyber bullying can follow children to their home, beyond the school playground, seven days a week 24 hours a day. These acts of emotional trauma occur on a child’s computer and smartphone. For this reason it is more difficult to monitor...
Sarah is an average teenage girl. She gets decent grades, likes to hang out with friends and is on the track team. One day when Sarah arrives at school she notices other kids staring at her and whispering, but she doesn’t think too much of it. Later in the day at lunch a few kids mutter nasty words at her as they pass by, kids she doesn’t even know. After school she turns on her cell phone and see 15 text messages from numbers she doesn’t know, all of them calling her horrible names like “skank” and “bitch.” Once she is home Sarah checks her e-mail to find messages like the ones on her phone, but one of them has a link. After clicking on the link Sarah is directed to a web site, and it appears to be all about her. Photo collages with unflattering pictures cover the page, and a bulletin board with hundreds of postings calling her nasty names, each one more malicious and hurtful than the last. After months of this Sarah can’t take it anymore, nowhere is safe, and she decides to end her life by taking pills from her mom’s medicine cabinet.
As technology quickly advances bullying has become a damaging act to our youth both physically and mentally that can not be ignored. What makes cyber-bullying such a serious issue is that it has been
There are times when kids and teens commit suicide over cyberbullying, but a lot of times… actually, most of the time, they can handle it alone, they just don’t know how. A number of tips to avoid cyberbullying are to not respond, not retaliate, and to talk to an adult/peer about the situation. Seriously, the situation will only worsen if you return the bullying back to the person who initiated it; don’t do it. When thought about, there are other ways to deal with cyberbullying. It doesn’t have to lead to self h...
First, the inherent element of cyberbullying is that it’s everywhere. It’s so widespread, it is present to the victim in a completely different way than physical or verbal abuse. The heavy reliance everyone now has on technology social media creates the platform for cyberbullying, and this is what makes victims extremely susceptible. Victim and bully alike have readily available access to the interwebs. These kids can’t just find a place to hide from it like they would from bullies at school, or the “real-life” bullies (Todd). When bullying is through the internet and other electronic communications, it is omnipresent to the victim because of the internet’s nature. Some people may think it isn’t any big deal, and it’s not like anyone’s being punched. However, hate spoken aloud or punches thrown only occur and damage in that moment, but on the internet, it’s out there there for the long term. Emotional distress follows suit in that long term. Now suicide rates in teens and children are sky high, and a major factor in that is depression from cyberbullying (Todd). When victims can’t identify the attacker, they are bound to feel much more helpless in those situations, because they may often feel...
McQuade, III, Samuel, James Colt, and Nancy Meyer. Cyber Bullying: Protecting Kids and Adults from Online Bullies. First Edition. Road West, Westport: Praeger Publishers, 2009. 47-49. Print.
Internet usage in children and adolescents has been increasing in a steadily fashion in the past number of years and with the increase in internet usage, a new form of bullying has developed – Cyber bullying. Cyber bullying can be defined as “the electronic posting of mean-spirited messages about a person,” (Merriam-Webster, 2012). This form of bullying can come through various mediums including but not limited to text messages, emails, videos, and social networking sites. There is an overwhelming amount of information that defines cyber bullying, identifies the demographics of bullies and victims of cyber bullying, and identifies the outcomes of cyber bullying on victims. More focus needs to be placed on who the perpetrators of this form of violence are and how this form of violence is linked to traditional bullying. This will allow researchers and practitioners to move forward with research and implementation preventative methods and intervention once the problem has already occurred.
...not be confident to tell anyone about being bullied, so it is important to talk to the people who have any of signs of it. Talking can help find if any bullying is being involved in their life. It seems impossible to protect children from cyberbullying but there is a lot you can do the help prevent it. On a daily basis, Cyber bullying affects many children, teens, or even adults. Cyber bullies think it’s funny to bully others online. When a cyber-bully posts something online, he/she does not realize the consequences for themselves. When you post something online, you must think of how it can affect you in the future when you need to go to college or get a job. There are many ways to track someone who is cyber bullying so don’t try to use a fake name thinking you won’t get caught. Just try to help prevent it in any way so we all can live in a safe environment.
Stutzky suggests that cyber bullying is the use of modern communication technologies to embarrass, humiliate, threaten, or intimidate an individual in the attempt to gain power and control over them. Bullying has been around since the beginning of time. These days however, bullying isn’t just happening on the playground, it’s happening on the internet and mobile phones, making it possible to bully a child 24 hours a day. Cyber bullying follows children around the clock and into the safety of their own bedrooms. A recent survey by MindOh!, an educational company that follows youth trends, reported that nearly 80% of the 5,500 teens that were surveyed said that they had been exposed to cyber bullying. Cyber bullying affects the mental health of so many young adolescents around the world, and the issue is steadily increasing as more and more ways to bully are created.In extreme incidents, cyber bullying has led teenagers to suicide. Most victims, however, suffer shame, embarrassment, anger, depression and withdrawal. While technology continues to evolve, new means of communication enable today’s bullies to become more effective in terrorizing and tormenting their victims. The aim was to increase awareness and decrease the prevalence of cyber bullying- Year 9 at Meridan State College being the stakeholders (people involved).
The online bully’s goal is to make their target feel weak; these online bullies can be referred to as a cyber bully. Cyber bullying is the exercise of using technology to embarrass, threaten, harass, or target another person; according to its definition it occurs among young people (New, 4). It is usually performed by a child’s peers and surprisingly occurs early as the second grade (Jacobs 1). Cyber bullying can even be unintentional, especially through the use of emails, IMs, and text messages because the tone of the sender may be hard to depict. However, recurring emails, online posts, and texts are hardly ever unintentional (124). As the number of youths increase that have the availability to technology, cyber bullying is likely to continue to rise and continue to take its toll on youth. Due to its excessive effect that it has on children today, Cyber bullying should be taken more seriously.