Posted on Delaware Online, written by Matthew Albright and Esteban Parra
Delaware was shocked earlier this month by the video that showed a group of teens assaulting a man with a mental disability.
The video quickly spread through Facebook, Twitter and other social media, drawing gasps and shaking heads from young people around the country.
When students at Calhoun Middle School in Denton, Texas, saw the video, they were determined to do something. One student began posting fliers around the school and organizing days when students would wear colored socks to show solidarity with 26-year-old victim, Karon of Ogletown, and others who face bullying.
“This is very powerful to see kids engaging like this,” said Julie Hertzog, director of PACER’s National Bullying Prevention Center in Bloomington, Minn. “The issue of bullying has been surrounded by silence. But now we are seeing students who are taking a very active stand against it.”
Hertzog said school leaders, advocates and others have spent years trying to teach students to stand up against bullying. The response to these attacks, she hopes, are a sign that it is happening.
“It’s a statement by kids saying that we understand this is an issue that hurts people,” she said. “We’re looking at this generation and they’ve been getting education about this, and now they are taking the responsibility themselves.”
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