Books

Confronting Bullying: Literacy as a Tool for Character Education

Everyone has a stake in bullying especially when we know kids who are bullies are much more likely to end up in jail as adults. In many of the recent school shootings the victims have experienced bullying themselves. Even though as individuals we can’t stop every act of violence, we can in schools work to reduce bulling on our campuses. “Everyone must identify a personal role in the formal and informal policies that seek to reduce violence, harassment, and bullying…Only when individuals are aware of a problem can they begin to consider taking action”. (Hazler 1996, p155)

Although bullying is receiving attention in schools, Confronting Bullying is the first to offer the inclusive inquiry cycle and the critical literacy perspective on bullying. Most books about bullying in classrooms offer suggestions that aren't embedded in literacy practice. Most character education books don't provide rich literacy instruction and quality book recommendations. Confronting Bullying provides all of these.

Confronting Bullying is available in over 223 libraries across the United States, Canada, Hong Kong, Singapore and South Africa. It is also included on the parentbooks Violence and Bullying booklist and the Action Alliance for Children Booklist.

It contains booklists of multicultural and social justice books that can be used for discussions of bullying issues.

Avaliable at Heinemann, Barnes & Noble, Borders and other fine retailers.

Dear Bully: Seventy Authors Tell Their Stories

Seventy authors share their experiences with bullying while students in school. First things first, I want to thank every single YA author who contributed to this collection. Secondarily, I am especially grateful to the twenty authors found in this collection who have been a part of RAW INK Online or have interacted in some way with my s tudents in the past few years.

This collection is so important and it couldn't come at a better time. This book should be in every administrator's office (their predecessor's failing to address this issue is a common thread woven through the experiences shaed), every media specialist's office, every counselor's office, and in the classroom libraries of every teacher works with these students who stories have not been told. . .yet. Here is the catalyst for discussion. Here are the authors saying, "It happened t o me too. . .tell me your story."

So much more than a Chicken Soup for the Soul kind of collection, each story found within is like salve for the wound. Bullying hurts, from the localized hurt of the wound to the lasting hurt of the scar left behind. We have to start with where it hurts--by talking openly and honestly about this problem--and in time we can affect the whole. This flies in the face of conventional wisdom (?) that says, "Oh this will get better with time" or "someday you'll look back at this and laugh." We wouldn't say such ludicrous things to accident victims or those in trauma. But what we see most often are administrators and policy makers tying the tourniquet and marking the victim's forehead with a T, not for "terminal" as there seems to be this collective denial that bullying has long term effect, but with a T for time (our victims can "get over" this). It's time to address the needs of these kids. How many tragic losses will it take before we stand up and say, "This bears as much of our attention as any conflated standard we could create." We need to create citizens not kids who can conjugate. Dear Bully allows us to look into the problem from the gallery. If it is to get better--like any other life-threatening scenario, the time must be now. This is basic assessment. . .this is triage. . .this is important.

Ellen Hopkins' introduction to the book should be of no surprise to readers who work with kids, but when you know the extended story behind her son, Orion, you feel every bit of hurt with Ellen and this very special young man.

Dear Bully has been carefully collected, archived, and rendered. I have been wanting to see this book since Megan Kelly Hall first started talking about the idea at Facebook (where I friend her). There is an author that will be familiar to readers who work with children of every age group, from Jon Sciezka's "Stench" and Mo Willems' "Bullies for Me" (a delightfully poignant and summarily triumphant cartoon panel in which Willems becomes a canine character--priceless) to Lisa McMann's BFFBOTT.COM,Lisa Yee's "Regret" and R. L. Stine's "The Funny Guy" to some of YA's biggest names today, Jo Knowles' "Kicking Stones at the Sun" and A. S. King's The Boy Who Won't Leave Me Alone" there is something for the elementary teacher, the middle school teacher, and the secondary teacher--and the media specialists that assist all of these age groups to pair a story with an author the students may be reading.

The collection is sectioned to allow the authors to share from their experiences, their regrets, their insights, and their opportunity to write back to bullies and to the victims of bullying everywhere. Further, the multi-genre approach taken by each of the authors communicates in a very quiet way that there are multiple ways of telling our stories and no one way is the best way or only way to do it. This makes Dear Bully Writer Workshop-ready as a genre study as much as a means for providing powerful mentor texts in preparation of drafting a personal narrative.

I am going to be bold in this review. There are so many schools that have an "anti-bullying" policy in place. They are nice. . .but like any initiative or program untended, they are failing. Kids are still hurting. Your intentions were good, but they were not good enough. The school that earnestly undertakes the problem of bullying in the hallways would make this book a part of its communications with parents and would read selections from the book as a means of sharing powerful anecdotes from familiar names/faces from the students' reading. I'd really love to see some of the authors create video testimonials from Dear Bully to share as a kick-off to beginning of the year school programs. And even further, it may be time for administrators, librarians, and teachers to begin telling their own stories of bullying.

I have this collection dog-eared already for when we share Chris Crutcher's short story, A Brief Moment in the Life of Angus Bethune and share the film adaptation, Angus. We might be able to use some of these narratives to open up the channels of discussion. I am noted for quoting George Ella Lyon time and time again, but she said it so wonderfully one time, "Who are we but our stories?" These seventy authors have chosen to share "Where [They're] From" and the place looks so familiar. . This review was written by Paul W. Hankins.

Paul Hankins with Young Adults Authors Gae Polisner and Sarah Darer Littman

Paul W. Hankins is a high school teacher in Indiana who promotes reading and writing beautifully. He has currently read over 800 books and blogs about them on goodreads.com (Link to Paul W. Hankins's Goodreads site) and facebook (Link to Paul W. Hankins's Facebook). He is incredible resources for teachers.

Who's Invited to Share? : Using Literacy to Teach for Equity and Social Justice

Who's Invited to Share? has had an impact nationally and internationally and has been used for study groups at universities including American University, University of Georgia, Hofstra University and in Saskatchewan, Canada. The book is avaliable on websites from England, Canada, Australia, Israel, Brazil and TraveltoEasternEurope.com. Who's Invited to Share? is also avaliable in over 225 university libraries in the United States, Canada, Hong Kong and South Africa.

Review from Amazon.com: "I will begin by saying this book has inspired me to use my gift of teaching with a group of students who will need it the most. Dr. Henkin shares a variety of personal and professional narratives which highlight the need to teach so that all voices are heard and honored. This book serves as an excellent resource for all teachers who are working toward creating an environment where all children are respected for what they bring to the classroom.

Dr. Henkin lists a variety of professional resources as well as children's books that deal with the issues of gender, diversity, and multiculturalism. These resources provide an excellent starting point to better understand the issues children bring to the classroom and the issues teachers face in the classroom.

Dr. Henkin interviews and observes many classrooms where teachers and students work together to create classrooms that are equitable for all. The students in this book seek to make their community better for all who live there. The curriculum is rich and meaningful and all voices are heard. This book is a must for all teachers to read."

The Terrible Secrets of the Tell All Club

By Catherine B. Stier

No one at school had ever thoughts up a club like this. all you had to do to be in it was answer some questions and share them with the rest of the club.

Questions like:

What is your favorite salad dressing?

Who is your BFF?

What was your most embarrassing moment?

There were plenty of reasons to be in the Tell-All Club. Kiley, T.J., Josh, and Anne each had a different motivation: One of them wanted to fit in, one wanted revenge, one had something to hide, and one of them was dying to find out another's secret.

Told in four different viewpoints, this funny, touching novel explores friendship, social pressures, bullying, and other anxieties of "tween girls and boys alike.'

Nobody Knew What to Do: A Story About Bullying

By Becky Ray McCain (2001). Chicago, IL: Albert Whitman & Company

Readwritethink

  • From Readwritethink.org Books about Bullies

Multicultural and International Book links:

Christensen, L. (2009). Teaching for joy and justice: Re-imagining the language arts classroom.

Milwaukee, WI: Rethinking Schools.

Laminack, L. & Wadsworth, R. (2012). Bullying hurts: Teaching kindness through read alouds and guided

conversations. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann.

miller, sj, Burns, L, & Johnson, T. (2013). Generation bullied 2.0: Prevention and Intervention Strategies

for our most vulnerable students. New York, NY: Peter Lang.

English Journal Preventing Bullying Behaviors 101 (6) (July, 2012).

Voices from the Middle Tolerance 2.0 20 (3) (March 2013)