Cyber Bullying Case Study

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With the vast production of technology and its easily accessible social networking cyber bullying has become more of an uprising problem. Bullying is broadly defined as intentional and repeated acts of aggression that take physical (e.g., hitting, theft), verbal (e.g., harassment, threats, name calling), and relational (e.g., spreading rumors, influencing social relationships).( Bradshaw, C) Now with the technology and online social sites, online harassment called cyber bullying has now become another way a bully can get thru to their victim. Perpetrators of cyber bullying enjoy a degree of anonymity and invisibility that is not always possible with more traditional or face-to-face forms of bullying, and which also can make them less aware of the impact of their behavior on victims. (Bonanno, R., & Hymel, …show more content…

(Chapter 2 Culture) By looking at the norms you quickly put together how cyber bullying does not fit in to society’s norms there for making it somewhat a taboo to do. With it being wrong why people still proceed to do harm to others could then be looked at. Away sociology may look at this situation would be to look at the social class, how was the child brought up as well as many other factors. When looking back at my interview with the bully he spoke about following the crowd when he first began to bully people until it became natural he also mentioned he remembered being an angry child. He gave me information about his back ground with his parents and his social class. All which could give sociologist evidence and data to put together to understand bullying itself. For example of data/percentage, more than 70 percent of heavy Internet users ages 12 through 17, mostly girls said they had experienced at least one incident of online intimidation via e-mail, cell phones, chat rooms and other electronic media in the previous year.(cyber bullying

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