As you set your phone down, it chimes. You pick it up to see who texted you, but your insides start turning when you look at the message from an unknown number. You don't know this person, but they definitely know you. The mean message across the screen makes you feel sick. Many kids feel this way. It’s called cyberbullying. Cyberbullying happens mostly on social media apps, like Snapchat, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and any many others. Cyberbullying has spurred on teen depression, and some kids have even lost their lives to cyberbullying. Cyberbullying is a huge issue in schools.We interviewed a few students from Kings Junior High School and a few teachers. Katie Henry is an 8th grader at Kings Junior High School. She herself has been cyberbullied and so have her friends. When we asked Katie if she thinks it affects kids, she said “It depends on who it's from.” The way she stood up to her bully is telling the bully to grow up. “Don't let people talk to you and treat you like trash.” Henry gives some advice to some kids who are going through cyberbullying.The bully has stopped attacking Henry, but she doesn't believe the bully has stopped. “ Cyber Bullying doesn't stop, there will always be people out there who cyberbully.” Mrs. Nagelhout is a 8th grade teacher at Kings Junior High School for English Language Arts.She admits that she and other friends have been cyberbullied and still are. When we asked her about her emotions about the situation, she said it made her
Rebecca Li Professor Nelson English 49 22 October 2013 Cyberbullying Bullying has become a subject that is commonly talked about now. Cyberbullying is a way most people bully others now. Many suffer from depression and anxiety because of cyberbullying.
As I entered high school, the prevalence of cyberbullying hit me like a ton of bricks. Over the years, as smartphones became more advanced, there was a shift from verbal and physical bullying to cyber
In the 21st century, Technology has transformed society in revolutionary ways. Anyone is able to instantly communicate with someone else via email, text or social media. Even though instant communication can achieve extraordinary things, it can also be used for horrible things. In fact, one of the biggest problems that schools face is cyberbullying. Cyberbullying is the act of harming or harassing another person using the internet.
Cyberbullying is a form of written and verbal bullying which is conveyed by teens and adolescents through communication technologies such as cell-phones, emails, text messages, websites, webcams and chatrooms. It also includes taking sexual photographs by ex-partners and sending to others after
Cyberbullying has been a big problem for teens and adults around the world. Cyberbullying is the use of electronic communication to bully a person, typically by sending messages of an intimidating or threatening nature. For most cyberbullying isn’t anything serious it’s just a person just joking around or just speaking their mind but its more than that its feelings being involved families being broken even hearts.
This article describes all about cyberbullying. It tells you what cyberbullying is and how you can help stop it. “Cyberbullying” is credible because of the abundance of information that is in the article, and because of all of the references too. This article is similar to the the other two articles that I cited because it talks all about the issue of cyberbullying, and it talks about ways that you can help be a part of the solution. This is different from the other articles because it talks more about what cyberbullying is and a bunch of facts about it, and less about the issue right now. The audience for this article is anyone who is curious about online harassment, or anyone who wants to try to help stop bullying because of issues they have been in or seen in their own life. This is perfect for my essay because it shows a lot of information that I can use to better understand my topic.
Inspirational speaker, writer, and community leader Anna Maria Chávez once said “Cyber Bullies can hide behind a mask of anonymity online, and do not need direct physical access to their victims to do unimaginable harm.” Cyberbullying is negatively taking over technology and adults aren’t aware of the potential dangers it has on their children.
Every year there are more than six-thousand people in America that are being cyberbullied. Cyberbullying is when one person, electronically communicates with another person, but in a harsh way.
Cyberbullying is the use of electronic communication to bully a person, typically by sending messages in an threatening nature or tearing down an individuals character based on religion, gender, ethnicity, or disability. In terms of effects overall, cyberbullying has increased the use of communication via technology and has become more common among teenagers (Cabral 3). Technology has made it easy for bullies to find individuals via social media in the privacy of their on own homes., which has allowed them to express how they feel anonomously. This has become an issue that is occurring more and more in High Schools and Middle Schools across America. One of the biggest discussions when dealing with bullying and cyber-bullying would be how do we stop this epidemic to save the soul of our youth? Education is key, we have to educate one another on the effects of bullying to know that this is real and affects so many people to this day. Much of cyberbullying is the
In their e-book, Bullying Beyond the Schoolyard, Sameer Hinduja and Justin Patchin define Cyberbullying as: “willful and repeated harm inflicted through the use of computers, cell phones, or other electronic devices” (36). Hinduja and Patchin are both Ph.D.’s, professors at universities, as well as primary researchers at the Cyberbullying Research Center. The research and community outreach that they are involved in could greatly reduce the number of cyberbullying cases worldwide. Cyberbullies typically operate through social networks like Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram to harass, intimidate, threaten, embarrass or otherwise target an individual. Cyberbullying is awfully prevalent nowadays and it is a far bigger issue than most people realize. It is an issue that is quickly growing; as there are hundreds of thousands of people signing on to use these networks for the first time every day. According to NoBullying.com, 25% of teenagers report that they have experienced repeated bullying via their cell phone or on the Internet, while 52% report having experienced it at least
Bullying is seen and unseen, noticed by others and unnoticed, it’s a problem not just in our little communities, towns, cities or states but all over our country, bullying is a worldwide problem. As the internet has roared up so has forms of bullying throughout the web. Cyber bullying has become a problem that has never been thought of before. Although it is less physical than traditional forms of bullying, it can have more devastating and longer-lasting effects. It is rapidly becoming a major problem. Now, a small physically weak child can be as much of a bully as the big brute but with more impact. Educators definitely need to understand how powerful and dangerous this new type of bullying has become as it has greatly impacted the classroom.
While social media and electronic means for communication have been around the better part of fifteen years, the past ten years have overall shown increases in cyberbullying. Although bullying in general over the past decade has been at a consistent rate, or in some cases even declining, cyberbullying on the average has been rising over the past decade. Statistics regarding
“Cyberbullying is the use of the Internet, cell phones, or other electronic communication devices to spread harmful or embarrassing information about another person.” (cyberbullying) The methods of cyberbullying are used in many forms, it can start by making up rumors about the victims, sending photos without their consent, making sexual remarks, and also most of the time threaten the victim’s life. The victims are likely to be aimed at females rather than males. The extreme cases that would endure the
We use technology in almost every aspect of our daily lives; it is how we stay connected in this fast-paced world. Technology provides many benefits, but it has the potential to destroy many people. With technology use on the rise, bullying has taken a new, more destructive form. Cyberbullying, as defined by the Cyberbullying Research Center, is the willful and repeated harm inflicted through the medium of electronic text (qtd. in Chait). Cyberbullying is a serious problem and has serious consequences.
What is cyberbullying? “Cyberbullying is intentional and repeated harm inflicted on people through the use of computers, cellular phones, and other electronic devices” (Cyberbullying 1). The use of technology today has greatly increased, and it is causing problems within the states. Schools are becoming more technological, and some schools even provide students with electronic devices. Four in ten teens have been bullied online, and girls are more likely to be victimized, rather the boys (Phillips). Online social media keeps growing, and it is causing cyberbullying to become more popular. “Nationally, 14.8 percent of students experienced online bullying, According to a 2013 study by the Centers for Disease Control