Letter to the Editor
The school district’s policy on bullying is OK as far as it goes, but
schools should also train children how to counter almost anything a bully
might throw at them. To achieve this goal, students should be taught
counterbullying skills upon entering the school system, and have age- and
gender-appropriate updates each year thereafter.
We should take the Charles Atlas approach and teach our 98-pound
weaklings how to protect themselves from sand-kicking bullies. I don’t
know that the curriculum should actually build muscle and teach
fisticuffs, but it ought to strengthen a student’s ability to prevent and
defend against bullying.
For example, a student who is well trained in playing “The Dozens” (a
game in which people pepper each other with verbal insults to build up
immunity and confidence) should have little to fear from a verbal bully.
If we can teach formal debating skills, we can teach informal verbal
jousting skills.
Why should schools be tasked with teaching yet another nonacademic
subject? A short answer is that students are sitting ducks in today’s
violence-saturated world. The social fabric that is used to provide some
protection from antisocial behavior has been rented a thousand ways.
Another short answer is that if kids take over many of the
counterbullying responsibilities, teachers can better concentrate on
academics. So, even on a purely tax dollar basis, a counterbullying
skills program would be well worth the effort.
My reading of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District policy reveals
that it intends to discourage bullying only by the force of higher
authority (that is, school administrators) directed at the bully, along
with damage control for the victim. The district policy may offer some
protection at school, but that’s not enough.
Every day, every student has to walk out of the schoolhouse cocoon
into the cold, hostile world. And after graduation, students will have to
deal with bullies for the remainder of their lives.
From the trenches of a middle school, a student wrote a devastating
analysis of the bullying issue. Byron de Arakal quoted him in his Sept.
19, 2001 column (“One kid’s plea for an end to schoolyard taunts”). The
boy considered the efficacy of the new get-tough policy: “When the
students at my school heard that there was a zero-tolerance policy, they
became uptight and stopped for only a matter of two weeks. I have yet to
see any students held accountable by school officials for their verbal
abuse.”
He had tried home-grown solutions with mixed results: “Ignoring them
is one answer, but after a while it becomes very difficult. I’ve tried
ignoring it for nine years. It doesn’t always work.”
The well-meaning policy ends up being counterproductive because it
tends to cripple students’ abilities to rely on themselves to protect
themselves. They are encouraged, instead, to rely on higher authority.
It’s analogous to building a padded room in which your baby can learn to
walk without getting hurt.
But if you kept your baby so protected until he or she graduated from
high school, you would have prevented your child from learning a critical
life skill: How to cope with gravity.
Bullying is like gravity: it’s not going to go away. Just as kids have
to learn how to deal with gravity, they have to learn how to deal with
bullying. Our schools can, and should, help them learn vital
counterbullying skills.
TOM EGAN
Costa Mesa
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