Children exposed to violence more likely to be cyberbullies. [Irishexaminer, by Niall Murray, 21/05/14]

The report found that cyberbullying on its own may not be responsible for mental health problems or suicidal tendencies. It says there are likely to be a range of contributory factors in victims of cyberbullying who suffer with those issues.

Helen Gleeson, the report author, said positive peer and family relationships have been shown to help buffer the more negative impacts of involvement in cyberbullying. “In contrast, young people who experience violence, harsh discipline, or neglect are at an elevated risk of being involved as both bullies and victims,” Dr Gleeson wrote.

Her report for the Department of Education and the HSE’s National Office for Suicide Prevention was launched alongside the National Anti-Bullying Centre at Dublin City University. Its work, having moved last year from Trinity College Dublin, will include research on how bullying can be tackled in schools, online, and in the workplace.

Dr Gleeson found similar risk factors — poor peer relationships, emotional and behavioural difficulties, more unsupervised time online, and bullying others face-to-face — in young people most at risk of being cyberbullied as those involved in traditional bullying, either as victims or bullies.

“Most young people who are cyber-victimised are also often subject to traditional types of bullying. It is difficult to determine whether negative impacts result from cyber or traditional victimisation,” she wrote.

Cyberbullying has been directly linked to a number of cases in recent years in which teenagers have taken their own lives. Dr Gleeson’s report said experiencing it is most likely to be one of a complex range of factors that contribute to poor mental health and self-harm or suicidal ideation.

She cited 2009 research which found that almost one in four Irish children reported experiencing traditional bullying but only 4% experienced cyberbullying, although it rises to 10% for mid-adolescents.

The report said it is likely that entirely new programmes are not needed to tackle cyber-bullying because it appears to be closely tied to traditional bullying. It suggested that further research is needed on the effects of family interventions, and on the media’s role — as some research has found reporting to have a detrimental effect on attitudes and beliefs. Studies on peer support strategies are also recommended.

While many strategies are often recommended in previous research, some have been found to be more effective than others. Dr Gleeson found little evidence to show that technological strategies, such as keeping passwords private or greater use of reporting facilities on social media sites, are ultimately effective.

Education Minister Ruairi Quinn said most of the 12 actions recommended in his department’s bullying plan last year have now been implemented, including training sessions for parents organised through the national parents’ councils, the requirement on all 4,000 schools to have dedicated anti-bullying policies, and a number of other measures.

Dr Gleeson said developing coping strategies can help reduce the negative impacts of cyberbullying, and recommends parents talk openly with children about the issue and what to do if they encounter cyberbullying.

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Bully 4u agrees completely that young people who experience violence, harsh discipline, or neglect are at an elevated risk of being involved as both bullies and victims. Parents buying violent age inappropriate video games for children please take note. The report also found little evidence to show that technological strategies, such as keeping passwords private or greater use of reporting facilities on social media sites, are ultimately effective. Despite this Bully 4u would strongly encourage students to keep their passwords private and to report all cases of cyberbullying and abuse.

Cyber-bullying a risk factor in suicide: report. [independent.ie, by Katherine Donnelly, 21/05/14]

However, although cyber-bullying is a risk factor in suicide, where young people have attempted to take their own lives it is not the only reason. Attempted suicide occurs in conjunction with other risk factors, such as mental health difficulties and family problems, the report found.

The report provides an overview of existing research on the prevalence and impact of bullying linked to social media on the mental health and suicidal behaviour among school-aged children.

Author, Dr Helen Gleeson, who was commissioned by the Department of Education and the HSE National Office for Suicide Prevention, also looked at the most effective means of intervening in cases of cyber-bullying and ways to prevent it.

It was published at the launch of the new national Anti-Bullying Centre in Dublin City University (DCU), by Education Minister Ruairi Quinn and Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore. The centre has transferred from Trinity College where it was established 18 years ago.

Although Dr Gleeson found some inconsistencies in existing research, such as in the levels of cyber-bullying reported, there was also common ground.

Experience

Cyber-bullying is less prevalent than traditional forms of bullying, but most young people involved in cyber-bullying also tend to have experience of traditional bullying.

In Ireland, 24pc of children reported experiencing traditional bullying, while 4pc reported experiencing cyber-bullying, rising to 9pc-10pc for mid-adolescents.

Dr Gleeson found that most research suggests that the bullying experience is likely to exacerbate existing mental health difficulties, such as anxiety or depression, which, in turn, may increase the risk of harm of suicidal ideation.

She said experiencing cyberbullying was most likely to be one of a complex range of factors that contribute to poor mental health and self harm or suicide ideation among young people.

Girls are at greater risk of negative impacts of being cyberbullied, but may be more likely to seek support than boys.

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It’s widely reported in the media coverage of this report that 4% of students are cyber bullied, rising to 9-10% for mid adolescents. Research from the ABC found that a lot of young people don’t recognise that what is happening to them is cyberbullying. They see it as something that happens to others. Consequently they under report. Education needed to empower these students.

ISPs urge parents to manage their children’s access to Internet; and top tips to keep your child safe online. [Techienews.co.uk, by Ravi Mandalia, 14/05/14]

ISPs in the UK including BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin Media have urged parents to manage their children’s access to Internet rather than blocking it straight out and has provided tips to keep their children safe online.

By launching child internet safety organisation dubbed Internet Matters, the ISPs have offering advice to parents on ways to shield their young ones against cyber bullying, sexting, online grooming as well as pornographic content.

ISPs have urged parents to manage rather than blocking their child’s access to the Internet by carrying out monitoring activities including checking on websites visited through browser history; parental control software; deletion of social profiles of their children which are no longer in use; and encouraging their kids to ignore and block cyber bullies rather than getting involved in a confrontation.

Top tips to keep your child safe online

  1. Set parental controls on all the devices used by your child – be it laptop, desktop or even handhelds including smartphone and tablets.
  2. Educate and encourage your kids to use child-friendly online search engines. You can enable safe search option and tweak the settings in browsers like Google and Bing. You can even set safety mode in popular apps such as YouTube, iTunes, Google Play, etc.
  3. Educate your kids about cyberbullying. Cyber bullies feed on reactions so educate and encourage your child to not to reply to bullies thereby making an active choice of not handing over power to cyber bullies.
  4. Keep an eye on browsing habits of your child by checking history of the web browser they use.
  5. Use built-in privacy tools to ensure adequate privacy of your child on social media platforms and block anyone who is cyberbullying them.
  6. Remind your child that anyone whom they have met online might feel like a friend, but they may not be who they are claim to be.
  7. Make it a habit to check information about your child on social media platforms and sites your child uses. In case you find inappropriate and inaccurate information about your child online, ask either the person who posted the information or the site administrator to get rid of the information.
  8. Keep an eye on the apps downloaded by your child on smartphones and tablets.
  9. If you child is not actively using a social network, it is advisable to delete the profile.
  10. Educate your child about online pornography and talk to them periodically as no filter is 100 percent effective.

DCU develops filter to fight cyber-bullies. [Herald.ie, by Alan O’Keeffe, 12/05/14]

Computer experts at the college have developed a prototype filter aimed at blocking hateful and offensive language detected on social media, including Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

The filter seeks to weed out terms of abuse, harassment, bullying and racial taunts.

The filter will use a variety of methods, including the use of semantics and word association.

DCU researchers are working with large multi-national partners such as Microsoft, Symantec and Intel in a bid to bring the filter to market within the next 18 months.

The troll trap is being developed at CNGL Centre for Global Intelligent Content, a DCU research centre funded by Science Foundation Ireland.

The centre’s commercial development manager Steve Gotz said it wants to develop a system that could detect content in messages, tweets or emails that could be harmful.

He said it was a particularly difficult challenge as bullying can be “very subtle in form, yet drastic in consequence”.

The system being developed could alert a parent or teacher that a child has posted something offensive. It may hide or remove the harmful message or alert an employer by email about inappropriate language.

Such a system may one day help families like the parents of Wee Oscar’ Knox who became the victims of trolls.

The five-year-old, who died of cancer last week, had been the subject of sick troll activity on the internet.

Trolls posted messages that said the little Glasgow Celtic fan was “not the only boy in Northern Ireland with cancer”.

National Cyberbullying Conference Ireland

 

Bully 4u and the National Anti-Bullying Centre DCU, have joined together to host a national cyber bullying conference.The conference titled “Understanding and Managing Cyber Bullying” will be held on the 1st of September 2014 in the main Conference Centre at Dublin Castle.

The conference will be of particular interest to; Principals, Deputy Principals, Guidance Counsellors, Boards of Management, Parents Associations, Academics, Legal Profession, Health Care Professionals, Parents,etc.

Attendance at this conference will support individual school management’s education requirements under the government’s anti bullying guidelines.

The conference will be opened by Mr. Sean Kelly MEP -MEP of the Year for Research & Innovation 2012 & Digital Agenda 2014.

Chaired by Ms. Mary Mitchell O’Connor TD – Chair of Education & Skills Committee, Member of Health & Children Joint Oireachtas Committee.

“Children and Internet Safety-Some Recent Developments”. Dr Geoffrey Shannon – Government Appointed Special Rapporteur on Child Protection

“Cyberpsychological interventions in cyberbullying: Tackling technology facilitated online aggression” Mary Aiken – Director RCSI CyberPsychology Research Centre. Her research looks at the impact of emerging technology on human behaviour, including the negative aspects such as cyberbullying.

“Youth online communication and safety: Ask.fm experience”. Liva Biseniece – Ask.fm Director of External Relations

“Don’t be taught a lesson. Liability of schools and personal liability of teachers under health and safety law. An interactive training session with a health and safety lawyer.” David Fagan – Business Legal

Other speakers (with details to follow);
– Clive Byrne, Director NAPD.
– Dr James O’Higgins Norman, Director National Anti Bullying Centre.
– Colmon Noctor (psychoanalytical psychotherapist, St Patricks Adolescent Service) and Kevin Deering (Bully4u).

A light lunch with tea and coffee will be provided during the day.

Tickets priced at €165 are available to purchase here 

Controversial Anonymous Apps Popular Among Venture Capitalists. [Daily Digest News, by Slav Kandyba, 03/05/14]

Social media posts land people in trouble, so it only makes sense that a slew of  mobile apps have cropped up to allow for anonymous social media. Secret, Whisper and Yik Yak liberate users to ask questions and post musings that they would otherwise not post.

While the apps are growing quickly and attracting venture capital funding, their downside has been exposed as well. Concerns have been raised that anonymous “users can too easily spread false rumors, malign people by name and bully their peers,” The Los Angeles Times reported.

Yik Yak, which launched in December, was taken down in Chicago in March when middle and high school students went on it to cyber-bully classmates. Another high school was shut down when an anonymous bomb threat was posted. Yik Yak is now keeping closer watch on posts and has blocked usage of the app at middle and high schools.

Websites such as Ask.fm and 4chan already allow users to post anonymously. The mobile apps are an evolution seen seen as an alternative to Facebook, Twitter and other social media networks becoming “a forum for feel-good comments and self-promotion,” said USC’s Annenberg School of Communication and Journalism social media expert Karen North.

“People are not hard-wired to keep secrets or even to want to keep secrets,” said North.

San Francisco-based start-up Secret launched in late January and has raised more than $10 million, including $8.6 million from Google Ventures. Chrys Bader-Wechseler, one of Secret’s founders, said “Facebook has ‘become saturated and everybody you know is on it … it’s very hard to share something that’s really personal because it goes out to this mixed audience and it stays permanent on your profile.”

 

 

School pupils trolling teachers with ‘vile’ abuse on Facebook and Twitter. [The Telegraph, by Graeme Paton, 21/04/14]

Teachers are facing “vile” abuse from children as young as seven on social networking websites such as Facebook, Twitter, You Tube and Instagram, according to research.

Figures show that more than a fifth of teachers have been the victim of “cyberbullying” from pupils and even their parents in the last year.

The study showed social media was being used to make offensive remarks about teachers’ personal appearance, classroom performance and sexuality, with websites also used to circulate malicious claims about alleged inappropriate behaviour and drunkenness.

In one case, pupils set up a bogus Facebook account in a teacher’s name, saying: “I will rape every Year 8 pupil who comes to the school.”

Other pupils found a picture of an unconscious drunk who resembled a particular teacher – then posted it on Twitter and distributed it to other children.

UK Teachers Report Being Bullied Online. [redOrbit.com, by Brett Smith, 21/04/14]

Cyber Bullying has become a hot topic in recent years and a new British-based survey revealed that teachers are not immune from Internet hostilities.

In its second annual survey, the UK’s largest teachers’ union found 21 percent of respondents reported seeing unsavory comments written about them on social networking sites and of those, 64 percent were from students, 27 percent were from parents and nine percent by both students and parents.

“Technology has transformed the working and social lives of many teachers and enhanced the learning experiences of pupils,” said Chris Keates , General Secretary of the NASUWT, in a press release . “However, it is clear that steps need to be taken to protect teachers from the abuse of social media by pupils and parents.”

Survey respondents said most disparaging comments revolved around their appearance, ability and sexuality. According to those teachers getting comments from pupils, 47 percent saw insulting comments and 50 percent had a remark made concerning their effectiveness as a teacher. Over one fourth saw videos or photos posted of them that had been taken without consent.

The NASUWT reported that teacher abuse included a student-started Facebook page that claimed a teacher wanted to kill him and a parent commenting online: “My son will fail now because of you.”

Other examples of abuse included fake Facebook profiles set up with sexual comments, including one page that had the ‘teacher’ posting, “I will rape every Year 8 pupil who comes to the school.”

“Teachers are often traumatized by the attacks made on them through social media,” Keates said. “Some have lost their confidence to teach once they see foul and personal remarks made by pupils in their classes and have left the profession.”

“Others have been so disturbed by the comments that their health has been affected,” she said.

Nearly 60 percent of teachers failed to report mistreatment from students to their supervisor or law enforcement officials. Almost two thirds said they did not file a report because they didn’t believe that anything might be done, 21 percent did not believe it would be given serious attention, nine percent were too uncomfortable and six percent had prior documented incidents that had not been addressed.

When teachers managed to report mistreatment to their supervisor, 40 percent said that measures were not taken towards pupils and 55 percent said action was not taken towards parents.

“Great strides had been made by the previous government, working in partnership with the NASUWT and other teacher unions and social media providers, in seeking to address this problem,” Keates said. “Comprehensive guidance had been produced about social media and internet safety which promoted good practice for schools on how to protect staff, and indeed pupils, from abuse.”

“Schools need policies which prevent abuse and identify sanctions which will be taken against parents and pupils who abuse staff in this way,” she added. “Schools should also be supporting staff in securing the removal of the offensive material from social media sites and encouraging the staff concerned to go to the police.”

 

 

Warning as social media nets children and parents. [The West Australian, by Rhianna King, 23/04/14]

A 13-year-old girl is left humiliated after a picture intended for her former boyfriend is circulated among her peers, a teenage boy faces questions from police after being caught with the photo and two sets of parents are bewildered that this could happen under their noses.

It’s an all-too-regular situation confronting schools and parents as more WA children – some as young as 11 or 12 – become involved in “sexting”.

Perth cyber safety expert Robyn Rishani, founder of Your Kids Online and who has spent the past three years visiting WA schools, said despite children as young as eight or nine having smartphones, many families remained oblivious to the risks.

“You wouldn’t let a child go to a casino or adult shop or pub but we’re letting them chat to strangers online,” Ms Rishani said.

Sexting – the consensual sharing of intimate images between children of a similar age – has become part of life for teens amid the rise of apps such as Kik Messenger and Snapchat.

“At one school I visited, a 15-year-old girl sent a sext to her boyfriend and it ended up on a porn site,” Ms Rishani said.

“Pictures can end up anywhere, and it can be devastating. Most kids are pretty smart and they aren’t all at risk, but it only takes a little bit of loneliness and curiosity and intrigue to see what’s out there.”

During her school visits, Ms Rishani warns students that their online footprint can haunt them throughout their adult lives. “Teens don’t think in the spur of the moment – they might send a picture to someone and before you know it, it’s all over the place,” she said.

“It can result in cyber bullying and destroy reputations. With a lot of these apps, there is very little privacy.”

Ms Rishani also warns students that they could end up dealing with police, or even the courts, for sending or receiving illicit images.

A WA Police spokeswoman said police tried to deal with the issue by alternative methods, such as cautioning and education, and no juveniles had been charged for sexting.

Ms Rishani will host a parenting seminar at Perth Zoo next month where she will urge parents to be cautious in posting images of their children on social media.

“A lot of parents don’t understand the full extent of how social media and the internet works, and this naivety can get them and their children into trouble,” she said.

 

Cyberbullying by parents and pupils takes toll on teachers. [ The Conversation, by Noel Purdy, 21/4/2014 ].

In the research, just more than a fifth of the 7,500 teachers surveyed had comments or information posted on social networking sites relating to their role as teachers. Almost two-thirds of those comments were written by pupils, and more than a quarter by parents.

The research reveals that almost half of the insulting comments from pupils related to their performance as a teacher. And the figure was higher still for comments from parents.

The vast majority of parents made their comments on Facebook, while pupils used a wider range of sites including Facebook, Ratemyteacher, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and Snapchat. The survey also found that the majority of teachers did not report the incidents – in most cases because they didn’t think anything could be done or that they would not be taken seriously.

When the teachers did report bullying to their headteacher, 40% said no action was taken against the pupil responsible, while 55% said that no action was taken against the parent responsible.

Lack of protection

Despite the majority of schools having internet or social media policies, less than a third of these policies refer to the protection of staff from cyberbullying.

Cyberbullying is a relatively new manifestation of the age-old scourge of bullying. It has been defined by Robert Tokunaga as: “Any behavior performed through electronic or digital media by individuals or groups that repeatedly communicates hostile or aggressive messages intended to inflict harm or discomfort on others.”

Its recent rise in schools is undoubtedly linked to the proliferation of internet-enabled devices which children and young people can now access 24/7. In 2013, Ofcom reported that 62% of 12-15-year-olds and 18% of 8-11-year-olds now owned a smartphone.

Over two-thirds of 12-15-year-olds had a social networking site profile, and the vast majority of them accessed their social networking sites every day, while one in five did so more than ten times per day. On average they spent spent 17 hours online each week.

The NASUWT research follows Andy Phippen’s 2011 survey of 377 education professionals in which 35% of respondents claimed that either they, or a colleague, had been subject to some form of online abuse. Such abuse was most likely to be from pupils (72%) or parents (26%) or other staff (12%).

It is also confirmed in a recent cross-border study I co-authored involving 143 schools in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, where one in six headteachers claimed that teachers had been victims of cyberbullying from pupils. Another 7% of headteachers claimed that teachers had been cyberbullied by parents in the past two months.

Several studies expose the threat of online bullying, the impact of which can be serious and long-lasting on children and young people. There has been much less research carried out to date on the impact of such online bullying on teachers, but Andy Phippen’s 2011 report does highlight feelings of intense frustration and isolation by teachers whose concerns have not been adequately addressed by school management.

Recent research studies have shown a rise in the incidence of cyberbullying among pupils. But one leading researcher has urged caution, describing cyberbullying as an “overrated phenomenon” compared to more traditional forms of bullying.

While acknowledging that other forms of bullying remain more common, our research found that 74% of post-primary headteachers and 33% of primary headteachers agreed or strongly agreed that cyberbullying was a growing problem in their school. An overwhelming 92% of headteachers also wanted more guidance on tackling cyberbullying, with considerable confusion emerging around their legal responsibilities.

The rise of online social networking has revolutionised how we communicate in society as a whole. Therefore it is not surprising that recent research such as the NASUWT survey shows there has been a parallel shift in communication between the home and the school.

This development is generally incredibly positive and fruitful, with many schools increasingly using their websites, social networking sites, emails and texts to communicate more effectively than ever with parents. Unfortunately, the disinhibition associated with online communication has also led to abuses.

No incident of cyberbullying is defensible. Pupils, teachers and parents alike need more education, guidance and support as we all seek to embrace the vast potential of online communication in safety.