Under a new state law in New Jersey, lunch-line bullies in the East  Hanover schools can be reported to the police by their classmates this  fall through anonymous tips to the Crimestoppers hot line.
   In Elizabeth, children, including kindergartners, will spend six class  periods learning, among other things, the difference between telling and  tattling.
 And at North Hunterdon High School,  students will be told that there is no such thing as an innocent  bystander when it comes to bullying: if they see it, they have a  responsibility to try to stop it.        
 But while many parents and educators welcome the efforts to curb  bullying both on campus and online, some superintendents and school  board members across New Jersey say the new law, which takes effect  Sept. 1, reaches much too far, and complain that they have been given no  additional resources to meet its mandates.        
The law, known as the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights, is considered the  toughest legislation against bullying in the nation. Propelled by public  outcry over the suicide of a Rutgers University freshman, Tyler Clementi,  nearly a year ago, it demands that all public schools adopt  comprehensive antibullying policies (there are 18 pages of “required  components”), increase staff training and adhere to tight deadlines for  reporting episodes.     
 
 
this is the result of the policy of not teaching values. I have been in education for many years and there definitely has been a large increase - in recent years - in bullying both in quantity and severity.
ReplyDeleteBy focusing on individual rights rather than the obligation of ethical and moral behavior - there has been a great increase in the problem. Unfortunately the solution is not to pass more laws.