Dasa Activity Answers

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The document discusses different scenarios and determines whether they constitute bullying behavior or not based on factors like repetition, intent to harm, and power imbalance.

Behaviors like social isolation, name-calling, posting hurtful messages or images online repeatedly over time with the intent to harm the other person were considered bullying.

When bullying is identified, school administrators should be notified, consequences put in place for the bullies, and parents informed as needed. The victim also needs support.

DASA Bullying Activity

1st Scenario: Angie is normally a friendly, engaged student in your classroom but
has started sitting in the back of the room and no longer gets involved much in
class discussions. One day you observe that, as shes leaving class, two other
students walking out of class right behind Angie are whispering to each other and
giggling.
Answer: Not bullying but would raise concern.
Rationale and Intervention:There is no clear indication that the two students
giggling were responding to Angie. The behavior patterns warrant close
observation, and, as a teacher, youd want to reach out to Angie to discuss the
changes youve noted, but, unless patterns persist and are directed specifically at
Angie, this situation does not appear to rise to level of clear-cut bullying behavior.

2nd Scenario: Your class is brainstorming a list of topics for a writing project. As the
students begin to talk about favorite hobbies as possible writing topics, Benny, a
child with autism and ADHD, blurts out loudly that he wants to write about his dance
class. Some of the other boys laugh. The next day, Benny comes to school wearing
jeans and a dance leotard. You overhear one of the boys say, Those are girl
clothes!
Answer: Not bullying but need more information.
Rationale and Intervention: The comments made by the boy to Benny clearly are
potentially hurtful but seem more of an expression of immaturity than an intentional
attempt to inflict harm. From the information provided, this is a single, isolated
incident and does not yet rise to the level of bullying. The teacher(s) involved
clearly will want to continue to monitor the situation to ensure that it is not
repeated.

3rd Scenario: During most of the semester, Steve was part of what had seemed to be
a pretty tight group of students who often would sit together in class and volunteer
to work as a team on class projects. For the last few weeks, when Steve would sit
with the group, they would ignore him, acting as if he wasnt there. Steve has now
started sitting on the other side of the room from the group. Steves mom calls the
school to express that her son is becoming increasingly withdrawn at home and
talks about wanting to change schools. The previous evening, she walked into
Steves room and found horrible messages addressed to him on his Facebook page
that he had left open. She has called you because the messages were from the
same group of students with whom Steve had been friends with-students in your

class. When she confronted her son about the messages, he broke down and said
that the messages have been appearing every night for the last couple weeks.
Answer: Bullying behavior.
Rationale and Intervention: The behavior of Steves group of former friends is
unwanted and socially aggressive and is occurring over time. Steves efforts to
remain connected with the group proved him to be powerless to combat the social
isolation it imposed. Steve eventually expressed his isolation in physical form by
sitting away from the group. The bullying then continued outside the classroom on
the Internet. The appropriate school officials need to be involved and administrator
should handle the consequences for the bullies.

4th Scenario: Today is the day your students are presenting their posters at the
conclusion of their genealogy projects. All students are supposed to stand up and
talk about their families and what they put on their posters. When Rita talks about
her dads, someone in the back of the room yells, Thats the weirdest thing I ever
heard!
Answer: Not bullying.
Rationale and Intervention: Based on the information provided, there does not
appear to be a repeated pattern nor does the student involved seem to have less
power than other students do. The comments warrant discussion of being
inappropriate response to a classmates presentation but without other indicators
does not appear to be bullying.

5th Scenario: Cathy is a bright student who has done well for the first part of the
school year. Although she is an attractive young woman, Cathy is considerably
overweight and possibly obese. Youve been impressed how her kindness and
bubbly personality has made her a very popular student. In a unit on the early
American West, Cathy presents a fine oral report on the role of women in settling
the western frontier. She gets an A on her report but from that point on you begin
to see a marked change in her personality. She becomes increasingly withdrawn in
class and her academic work is barely passing. Concerned about the change youre
seeing, you ask to meet with her after school. When you express your concern,
Cathy explodes in anger, lashing out at this stupid school and storms out of your
classroom. A piece of paper falls out of her book bag as she leaves. You pick it up
and see that it is a crudely drawn picture of an overweight woman in a cowgirl
outfit. Written across the top are the words, Cathy the COWgirl. After further
investigation, you find that these pictures have been appearing in the girls

bathroom and locker room as well as on the Internet. Some of them simply read,
Cathy the Cow.
Answer: Bullying behavior.
Rationale and Intervention: Focused primarily on her weight, the behaviors are
unwanted, aggressive and designed to make Cathy look foolish, and clearly being
repeated over time. Cathys outburst may be her built up frustration and anger at
not being able to stop the behavior and feeling powerless. School administrators
need to be involved and parents should be notified appropriately.

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