Hi all -
I'd very much appreciate your comments and feedback on the following and whether bullying is prevalent in these forums (and if so, to what extent).
I'd very much appreciate your comments and feedback on the following and whether bullying is prevalent in these forums (and if so, to what extent).
Bullies take sticks and stones from playground to internet
By Hannah Edwards
April 23, 2006
BULLYING has moved out of the school yard and into cyberspace, with the internet and mobile phones now the major tools of student bullies.
A major Australia-wide survey of 13,000 girls found that 42 per cent of respondents had experienced some form of cyber-bullying - a worrying result, says adolescence psychologist and spokesman for the National Coalition Against Bullying Michael Carr-Gregg.
"The interesting thing about this survey is that it shows we have got a new, really major public health issue for our young people," Dr Carr-Gregg said.
He said a "whole new lexicon" of bullying had evolved with the shift into cyberspace, with terms such as "masquerading" - where one student steals another's passwords and sends out inflammatory messages under their name - and "flaming" - where students send streams of abuse in a public, online arena - now common.
The survey found that 39 per cent had occasionally been flamed and 41 per cent had at one time had someone masquerade as them on the internet.
But parents are typically ignorant of these potentially devastating new bullying methods, Dr Carr-Gregg said.
"One thing parents don't understand is that the length of a person's Buddy List [the contact list in one online chat program] is a social indicator of your social status," Dr Carr-Gregg said.
Use of new technology is prevalent among young people, the Girlfriend magazine-run study found, with 97 per cent of respondents able to access the internet at home and 69 per cent cent using a mobile phone at school.
Dr Carr-Gregg said cyber-bullying was a new phenomenon, referring to a study by the University of New Hampshire in 2004 where just 7 per cent of respondents said that they had been bullied online.
The new style of bullying can have a devastating effect on young people.
"At school, if you are bullied you can tell a teacher but in this environment there is no one to talk to," Dr Carr-Gregg said. "It is more damaging than normal school bullying."
A combination of the technologies is also being used for bullying, such as students using their mobile phone to take photos of another student and uploading it to a public website.
He said parents and internet service providers need to get active against cyber-bullying.
"My one plea to parents is to do something about children's computers in their bedroom. Put it out into the main part of the house.
"[I am also] challenging internet service providers to take note of these results and start being proactive. They need to show a civic responsibility and educate kids about what's acceptable and what's not."
http://www.smh.com.au/news/technolo...d-stones-online/2006/04/22/1145344321883.html