There’s a lot to learn about bullying. Don’t worry, you won’t be graded on this quiz. This is your chance to show what you’ve learned about the power everyone has to affect a bullying situation.
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Can peer pressure be both positive and negative?
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Can peer pressure be both positive and negative?
Answer: Yes.
Peer pressure can be helpful to address bullying such as a group including an isolated individual in an activity. It can also have a negative impact such as a group of bystanders laughing at someone who was just targeted by bullying.
Can peer pressure be both positive and negative?
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The phrase “person who bullies” is preferred over “the bully.”
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The phrase “person who bullies” is preferred over “the bully.”
Answer: Yes.
Bullying is a behavior, not an identity, and behavior can and does change.
The phrase “person who bullies” is preferred over “the bully.”
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Students with disabilities are bullied at a higher rate than their non-disabled peers.
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Students with disabilities are bullied at a higher rate than their non-disabled peers.
Answer: Yes.
Students with disabilities are bullied at a rate of 2 to 3 times more than their nondisabled peers. Statistics show that bullying happens to almost 75% of students with disabilities.
Students with disabilities are bullied at a higher rate than their non-disabled peers.
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What is “person first” language?
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What is “person first” language?
Answer: Placing the person over their disability or difference
Person-first language involves prioritizing the personhood of an individual above any one individual characteristic. For example, you would say “a child with a disability” rather than “a disabled child.” By putting the person first, you acknowledge that one particular trait does not define him or her. This is to view them as a complex human being with many traits, talents, and desires. When someone is identified someone solely by a label or medical diagnosis, they are devalued as individuals.
Person first language can apply to other situations – as its important to describe what a person has, not what he or she is. For example, you would say “a man experiencing homelessness” rather than “a homeless man.”
What is “person first” language?
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How often will a bullying situation end when a peer intervenes?
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How often will a bullying situation end when a peer intervenes?
Answer: 57%
Students can be especially effective in bullying intervention. More than half of bullying situations (57 percent) stop when a peer intervenes on behalf of the student being bullied.
How often will a bullying situation end when a peer intervenes?