Bullying Prevention Plan

SCHOOL: CWDHS DATE: September 2024

Everyone at our school is committed to making our school a safe, inclusive and equitable environment for all.  We treat each other with respect and we will refuse to tolerate inequities in any form at our school. We know that a “whole-school” approach where all stakeholders are involved in supporting our students helps create and maintain a positive school climate.  

Definition of Bullying

“Bullying” means aggressive and typically repeated behaviour by a student where, 

The behavior is intended by the student to have the effect of, or the student ought to know that the behavior would be likely to have the effect of,

causing harm, fear or distress to another individual, including physical, psychological, social or academic harm, harm to the individual’s reputation or harm to the individual’s property, or

creating a negative environment at a school for another individual, and

The behavior occurs in a context where there is a real or perceived power imbalance between the student and the individual based on factors such as size, strength, age, intelligence, peer group power, economic status, social status, religion, ethnic origin, sexual orientation, family circumstances, gender, gender identity, gender expression, race, disability or special education needs.

Bullying takes different forms of contexts with age.  It can be physical, verbal, social/emotional or through electronic means (cyber-bullying).  Bystanders contribute to bullying by doing nothing to prevent it or become actively involved in supporting it.

“Cyberbullying” includes electronic communication that:

Is used to upset, threaten or embarrass another person.

Uses email, cell phones, text messages and social media sites to threaten, harass, embarrass, socially exclude or damage reputations and friendships.

includes put downs, insults and can also involve spreading rumors, sharing private information, photos or videos or threatening to harm someone.

Examples of Bullying

PHYSICAL AGGRESSION: e.g., hitting, pushing, stealing, damaging property 

VERBAL AGGRESSION: e.g., insults, threats, taunting someone in a hurtful way, name calling, making sexist, racist or homophobic comments

SOCIAL OR RELATIONAL AGGRESSION: e.g., spreading rumors about someone, excluding someone, gossiping

ELECTRONIC (Cyberbullying): e.g., spreading rumors and/or hurtful comments through the use of email, cell phones (texts) or on social media.

Safe Schools Committee

(Note: mandatory for all schools – an existing committee may assume this role)

School Administrator: Janine Grin (Principal), Laura Griffin & Christine Kirkland(Vice-Principals)

Equity Rep: Shelby Errygers

Teacher(s): Stephanie Jones, Briana Lovato

Support Staff: Kim Sonnet

Student Rep:  (when appropriate) TBD

Parent: Jane Beaudoin

Community Partner:  Matteo Schwartzentruber (The Grove), Kate Crozier (Community Justice Training)

The role of this committee should include but is not limited to the following: 

Develop and annually review the School Bullying Prevention Plan 

Implement and analyze data from the School Climate Survey (WHY – Wellness Health of Youth Survey) - every two years

Identify and implement bullying prevention and intervention programs that address the needs of the school

Identify relationship building and community building programs relevant to the needs of the school 

Assist with training and awareness raising strategies for staff, students and parents/ guardians

Communicate bullying prevention and intervention strategies and reporting procedures to the school community

School Monitoring and Review Process

This Bullying Prevention and Inclusive School Plan was developed or reviewed by our Safe School Committee on: September 2024

Our most recent school climate (WHY) survey was or will be conducted on: 2024    

41% of students in grades 9-12,

82 parent surveys were completed  

16% of staff completed our most recent school climate survey.

Data from our most recent climate (WHY) survey indicated that:

74.8% of students in grades 9-12 feel safe at school. (up 5.6% from 2022)

76.2% of students report feeling included

39.2% of students in grades 9-12 indicated that they told an adult about bullying that had occurred.

24.1% have been bullied at school or on the bus in the last year

19.7% have been bullied outside school in the last year  

40.7% reported being bullied by electronic or cyberbullying in the past year

Training Strategies for Staff and Members of the School Community

Members of our school community will receive Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive training through:

🗹Board professional development workshops

🗹Online training for new employees

🗹Staff meetings

🗹Provision of professional development materials and resources

🗹Other (please specify) Staff developed curriculum resources

Parents/Community Communication and Outreach Strategies

We will communicate our Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive strategies and initiatives by:

🗹Including our Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive Plan in our school/student handbook

🗹Including information inserts in our school newsletters and other in-house publications

🗹Sharing information during school assemblies and announcements

🗹Sharing information through bulletin board postings

🗹Sharing information at School Council and other parent meetings

🗹Sharing information at staff meetings

🗹Integrating Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusion into classroom instruction

🗹Posting our Bullying Prevention Plan and Safe, Equitable and Inclusive Schools strategy on our school website

🗹Informing parents and school volunteers of our procedures for reporting incidents of bullying and inequity

🗹Assisting parents to build awareness and knowledge so they may support our school Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive strategies

Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive Strategies, Education Programs/Activities

Note:  Our Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive goal(s) are determined after analysis of the results of our school climate (WHY) survey.

School Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive Goals(s):

Next Step:

Set CWDHS vision, mission, and core values for the next 3-4 year period.

In what ways will this step disrupt or decrease colonization, racism and/or oppression?

Sets expectations and allows for accountability

Staff and students

Next Step:

Provide Professional Development for all staff:

Equity in grading

Implicit bias

Sensitivity training

In what ways will this step disrupt or decrease colonization, racism and/or oppression?

Revisit staff practices in assessment and grading

Encourages shift away from past practices

Increases awareness of our own bias and microaggressions

All of this learning has a positive impact on all students, especially those in the margins.

Next Step:

Make the school more welcoming and safe by deliberately changing the school’s physical space by prioritizing areas as identified by students and visitors to the building.

In what ways will this step disrupt or decrease colonization, racism and/or oppression?

Students, staff and visitors must feel safe and welcome.

Next Step:

Amplify the voices of students in the margins through planned and purposeful opportunities such as affinity groups, direct involvement in the equity accountability audit, and student leadership. 

In what ways will this step disrupt or decrease colonization, racism and/or oppression?

If student voices and experiences are truly valued, we must create meaningful opportunities for students to share and lead.

Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive, Education Programs and Activities:

Our school currently implements or will implement the following bullying prevention and equity & inclusive education programs and activities that focus on developing healthy relationships and provide leadership opportunities for our students:

C Dub Hub (Mental Health & Wellness Centre) and programming

Monthly lessons on equity, diversity, mental health & civics topics

Promotion of The Grove for student use during lunch or spare

CW spirit days

Mental Health week (May)

Curriculum Connections: eg. Health and Physical Education; Coop; Indigenous Studies; Civics

Truth & Reconciliation and Orange Shirt Day (September 30th)

PRISM

SOCA

Bullying Prevention Awareness week (November) including a poster with staff and student responsibilities that are consistent with how bullying will be handled at CW

Falcon Flight Crew

Angel Campaign

National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women

Black Heritage, Black Brilliance and Black Joy &  BLM initiatives throughout the year

Pink Shirt Day (February 23)

Rainbow Conference (if offered)

Pride Week (June)

Ramadan (March 10-April 8) and Diwali (October 31-November 1)

International Women's Day (March 8)

World Down Syndrome Day - (March 21)

Special Olympics Pep Rally

Red Shirt Day (May 29)

Falcon’s United

CW Eats

Bullying Prevention and Equity & Inclusive Responsibilities

Staff:

Closely supervise students in all areas of the school and school grounds

Watch for signs of bullying and stopping it when it happens

Respond quickly and sensitively to bullying reports (Affirm, Ask, Assess, Act)

Take seriously parents’ concerns about bullying incidents

Assign consequences for bullying

Teach students our procedures for reporting incidents of bullying

Provide a safe environment for students who report bullying (protection from retaliation)

Treat others respectfully

Model positive ways of getting along with others

Students:

Treat each other respectfully

Refuse to bully others

Refuse to let others be bullied

Refuse to watch, laugh or join in when someone is being bullied

Include everyone in play, especially those who are often left out

Report bullying to an adult

Parents:

Model positive ways of getting along with others

Help their child find ways to express anger that do not involve hurting others physically or emotionally

Teach problem solving skills

Inform school staff if their child tells them about a bullying incident

Support the schools bullying-prevention efforts

Help their child understand the value of accepting and celebrating individual differences

Be alert to signs their child is being bullied or may be bullying others

Intervention Strategies

Our staff will use the following process when bullying is reported:

Acknowledge the Incident / Affirm

“You were right to report/get help from an adult.”

“I’m glad you asked for help with this.”

Gather Information / Ask Questions

 “Tell me more about what happened.”

“Has this happened before?”

“Did anyone try to help you?”

“Are you telling me this is to get someone in trouble or to keep someone safe?”

Assess Safety / Make a Plan

Determine what the student needs to feel safe now

What can the student do if the bullying continues

What steps need to be taken to limit the possibility of retaliation for the person reporting the bullying

Who the student will tell if there is another incident

Act / Follow-up

Determine “next step” or refer the student to an administrator

Tell them what will happen next

Check with the student to determine the success of the intervention

Reporting Incidents of Bullying

Students, parents, school staff and volunteers may use the following methods to report incidents of bullying as appropriate:

Student to Student:

Safe Schools Incident Reporting (on-line) 

On-line Bullying Reporting Tool 

Tell an adult in the building (phone, in person, email etc.)

Parent / Teacher interviews

Make an appointment to meet with school staff 

When responding to a bullying incident, our school staff uses a progressive discipline approach.  Use of Progressive Discipline supports a safe, inclusive and equitable learning and teaching environment in which every student can reach his or her full potential. Strategies may range from early intervention to more intensive intervention in cases of persistent bullying, with possible referral to board support personnel, community or social service agencies.   

These may include but are not limited to: 

Well-Being strategies and programs;

providing students with the opportunity to learn life skills such as conflict resolution, anger management and communication skills;

collaborative problem solving;

utilizing models based on the concepts of peer mediation;

documenting incidents requiring disciplinary measures;

use of progressive discipline and consideration of mitigating factors;

ensuring that contact is made with the parent(s)/guardian(s) of students, under the age of 18, early in the disciplinary process and involving them in a plan to improve the behaviour;

CYC support

referral to outside agencies (e.g., CMHA, DCAFS)

restorative justice practices (e.g., written or verbal apology, community service)                        (2024)