Time Magazine   A new study recently published in the Journal of Criminology
 suggests that the anti-bullying programs that have become popular in 
many schools may not be as useful as previously thought. The authors 
examined 7000 kids at 195 different schools to try to determine child 
and school influences on bullying. Surprisingly, the authors found that 
children who attended schools with anti-bullying programs were more
 likely to experience bullying than children who attended schools 
without such programs.  In fairness, the data is correlational, so it’s 
not possible to say that anti-bullying programs necessarily led to more 
bullying.  One could argue that, perhaps, schools with bigger bullying 
problems were more likely to implement anti-bullying programs.  
Nonetheless, this data suggests such programs may not be terribly 
effective. [...]
But
 the bigger and better reality check is that bullying behavior has 
actually been declining. Researchers David Finkelhor and colleagues 
surveyed children in 2003 and again in 2008 and found that
 they were being exposed to less violence across the board, including 
bullying. Across most indices, most deviant youth behavior has also been
 improving—smoking, drinking, violence, pregnancy, suicide.  It’s 
impossible to say why for sure, but I believe it’s part of a larger 
trend and not the result of anti-bullying programs.
Bullying was undeniably a problem that needed to be brought out of 
obscurity, but the issue has arguably now gotten too much attention. 
Such hype can lead to other problems such as the use of bullying 
accusations themselves as weapons in peer conflicts and overly harsh 
“zero tolerance” policies that over punish minor infractions  and may 
exacerbate the isolation that can lead to bullying in the first 
place. Now that bullying has been reduced, we need to be careful that it
 doesn’t distract us from other pressing problems besetting our nation’s
 schools.
I have seen this myself. In my daughter's school they had and "anti-bullying" program. Afterwards the bullies would chant to to their targets "you are a bully".
ReplyDeleteBullying is a huge problem in some of the most 'prestigious' yeshiva elementary schools. Until the bullies, (often the children of big donors and 'rabbonim' are dealt with properly, the problem will get worse and will hit the general media.
ReplyDelete