In many of my articles I focus
on suggesting urgent changes that should/could be made to Belize ’s
Education system. I also encourage
Education policymakers and educators to stop living in the past, and start
adapting teaching methods that are more in line with 21st Century
ways of working, learning, and living.
However, I realize that being human we tend to be very sensitive, and my
repeated promptings, i.e. “we should or should not” and “let us or let us not”,
may eventually end up annoying the very people who the promptings are meant to
inspire and/or stir to action.
Therefore, this week’s article focuses on highlighting positive actions
that are/can be taken by many parents and educators in Belize who work
everyday with young people. Stressing
the positive to our Youth, through our actions, is most effective, and provides
them with memorable consequences and lessons that can help them grow and
mature. Parents and educators who make
concerted efforts everyday to provide positive examples, at home and at school,
for young people to follow are Belize’s greatest heroes.
October is recognized as
“Bullying Prevention and Awareness Month”.
Parents, educators, and students who bravely address this very real and
extremely harmful issue, that surfaces almost everyday in homes and schools across
the country, strengthen the very foundations of our society. Positive actions against this unwanted,
violent, and self-deprecating occurrence that surfaces everyday throughout
society, including in politics, can be as simple as recognizing and reporting
those who display bullying behavior. On
the other hand, standing up to one or more bullies for one’s and/or someone
else’s safety and dignity is never easy; we may actually be physically hurt
each time we choose to “stand up” and refuse to be a mere bystander to bullying
behavior. Reporting or standing up to
bullies, nevertheless, helps immensely to create emotionally safe schools and
communities. Without physical and
emotional safety, learning is almost impossible.
It’s almost impossible to
conceive of any one person being born a bully.
Bullies, just like difficult students, (not synonymous) can be found in
almost every school today, starting with very young students all the way up to
adults. However, they are not born that
way; as they slowly grow, they learn to mimic the negative, abusive, and violent
behaviors around them, starting from in their home environments. Unfortunately, each time we label them, we
conveniently place them in unwanted categories, and without realizing it
perhaps, enable them to keep digging themselves deeper and deeper into very
lonely holes everyday – at home, at school, and throughout the community. Conclusions of many well-documented research
studies carried out by educational psychologists show that the more we refuse
to be truthful, direct, and positive with bullies and difficult students,
especially at school everyday, the more they seem to lose any sense of dignity
they may have and desperately want, and the more they keep reaching out in all
the wrong ways to try to get our attention.
Being positive, therefore, means trying to help both sides: bullies and
victims.
Bullying is not just shoving
another student in the hallway at school, or physically abusing and hurting
another student as a way to get attention.
Bullying includes writing nasty notes, gossiping, hiding books from students, and taking their
lunches; it goes all the way up to cyber bulling on the internet (now
accessible on cell phones and I pads) and outright gang intimidation. Bullying by educators includes aiming unkind
and harsh comments to students to humiliate them in front of their peers. It is totally unacceptable that today young students
all over the world today are being bullied mercilessly to the point of
committing suicide when they can take it no longer. Being positive means choosing to address, not
ignore, this behavior! It means not readily
stereotyping bullies or victims. It
means addressing an actual person and his/her behavior, everyday, not just
addressing a label. Most importantly, it
means not remaining silent, but being willing to intervene and accept the
challenge of working with both bullies and victims to help them (re)gain the dignity
they so desperately need and want. It
means finding ways to discipline our young people, starting from birth, no
matter how challenging that may be, but with dignity.
Since I wrote this article, less than a week ago, 3 elementary (primary) schools in the USA have had incidents (shootings/murders) related to or caused by "bullying".
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