Tax ID# 94-2797523
The Castro Valley Educational Foundation is a 501(c)(3)corporation. Donations may be tax deductible. Please consult your tax advisor.
Make a donation through PayPal. Just click on the PayPal icon to get started.


The Castro Valley Educational Foundation is now a partner with the United Way of the East Bay. When you make your contribution be sure to designate CVEF.
CVEF is now a member of

Group ID 500030630

|
|
Cyberbullying
Young people are using the Internet more than ever and most
have Internet access from home. For many children, the
Internet isn’t simply a convenient way to research or a fun
after school activity-it’s a big part of their social life. Emailing
and chatting with friends are children’s most common online
activities after studying and playing games. But like many
other social situations, some kids bully other kids online.
What is cyberbullying?
Cyberbullying is similar to other types of bullying, except it
takes place online and through text messages sent to cell
phones. Cyberbullies can be classmates, online
acquaintances, and even anonymous users, but most often
they do know their victims. Some examples of ways kids bully
online are:
• Sending someone mean or threatening emails, instant
messages, or text messages.
• Excluding someone from an instant messenger buddy list
or blocking their email for no reason.
• Tricking someone into revealing personal or
embarrassing information and send it to others.
• Breaking into someone’s email or instant message
account to send cruel or untrue messages while posing as
that person.
• Creating websites to make fun or another person such as
a classmate or teacher.
• Using websites to rate peers as prettiest, ugliest, etc.
Both boys and girls sometimes bully online and just as in factto-face bullying, tend to do so in different ways. Boys more
commonly bully by sending messages of a sexual nature or by
threatening to fight or hurt someone. Girls more often bully
by spreading rumors, sending messages that make fun of
someone or exclude others. They also tell secrets.
Its Effects on Kids
Victims of cyberbullying may experience many of the same
effects as children who are bullied in person, such as a drop in
grades, low self-esteem, a change in interests, or depression.
However, cyberbullying can seem more extreme to its victims
because of several factors:
• Occurs in children’s home. Being bullied at home can
take away the place children feel most safe.
• Can be harsher. Often kids say things online that they
wouldn’t say in person, mainly because they can’t see the
other person’s reaction.
• Far reaching. Kids can send emails making fun of
someone to their entire class or school with a few clicks,
or post them on a website for the whole world to see.
• Anonymity. Cyberbullies often hide behind screen
names and email addresses that don’t identify who they
are. Not knowing who is responsible for bullying
messages can add to a victim’s insecurity.
• May seem inescapable. It may seem easy to get away from
a cyberbully-just get offline-but for some kids not going
online takes away one of the major places they socialize.
Cyberbullying can be a complicated issue, especially for adults
who are not as familiar with using the Internet, instant
messenger, or chat rooms as kids. But like more typical forms
of bullying, it can be prevented when kids know how to
protect themselves and adults are available to help.
Stop Cyberbullying
Whether you are a parent, teacher, or other adult who works
with kids, you can help stop cyberbullying. You can start by
talking to kids about the issue and teaching them the rules
below that will help prevent cyberbulllying from happening to
them or someone they know.
What Kids Need to Know:
• Never give out personal information online, whether in
instant message profiles, chat rooms, blogs, or personal
websites.
• Never tell anyone but your parents your password, even
friends.
• If someone sends a mean or threatening message, don’t
respond. Save it or print it out and show it to an adult.
• Never open emails from someone you don’t know or from
someone you know is a bully.
• Don’t put anything online that you wouldn’t want your
classmates o see, even in email.
• Don’t send messages when you’re angry. Before clicking
“send,” ask yourself how you would feel if you received the
message.
• Help kids who are bullied online by not joining in and
showing bullying messages to an adult
• Always be as polite online as you are in person.
Since most cyberbullying takes place at home, it’s important
that parents know about cyberbullying and that they get
involved in preventing it. Just like parents help their kids
avoid inappropriate websites, they can protect them from
cyberbullying.
What Parents Can Do
• Keep your home computer in a busy area of your house.
• Set up email and chat accounts with your children. Make
sure that you know their screen names and passwords and
that they don’t include any personal information in their
online profiles.
• Regularly go over their instant messenger “buddy list” with
them. Ask who each person is and how your children
know him or her.
• Go to www/mcgruff.org to print out the commonly used
acronyms in instant messenger and chat rooms from the
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and
post it by your computer.
• Discuss cyberbullying with your children and ask if they
have ever experienced it or seen it happen to someone.
Tell your children that you won’t blame them if they are
cyberbullied. Emphasize that you won’t take away their
computer privileges – this is the main reason kids don’t tell
adults when they are cyberbullied.
|
______________

______________
Grant a Wish

______________
Sponsor a Scholarship

Learn how HERE
______________
Nominate a Friend of Education

Learn How HERE
|