Monday, 16 November 2009

National Anti-Bullying Week

Free anti-bullying activity ideas

There are many activities and events that you could do for anti-bullying week and outside of anti bullying week. Some of these are free and some of them cost money.

Activities or events that you could do yourself for free are listed below. We will continue to add to this list so check back regularly for more ideas.

  • Links and Transitions Project; Secondary and their feeder Primary schools join together for a day in anti-bullying week. An example of how this could happen is where a selection (suggest a group of 20 pupils) of current primary year 6 pupils create a short performance piece showing their concerns about bullying in Secondary school which is performed to a selection (suggest a group of 20 students) of Students from the Secondary school. Everyone involved then spend 90 minutes exploring the performance piece in an active way such as through role-play, circle time, and frozen imagery. The results can then be fed back to all schools involved through assembly or small group active discussion
  • Set up an anti-bullying poetry competition - hold prize giving in anti-bullying week
  • Get students to create their own anti-bullying policy which can be voted on by the school in assembly during anti-bullying week
  • Create a series of anti-bullying assemblies during anti-bullying week. A different year group could lead the assembly each day of anti-bullying week
  • Set up an anti-bullying poster competition - hold the prize-giving in anti-bullying week
  • Join up with a local media arts college to create an anti-bullying radio station for anti-bullying week
  • Create a school anti-bullying web site
  • Create an anti-bullying festival. Get a variety groups of students within the school to each design/create a different kind of experience about bullying that can be showcased in the school during anti-bullying week. Experiences could include: anti-bullying songs, anti-bullying poems, anti-bullying shows, anti-bullying website, anti-bullying posters, anti-bullying stories, anti-bullying sculptures, anti-bullying films and so on. To make the day extra special invite along a local celebrity to host the festival.
  • Inform the local community of your anti-bullying activities. Create art or performance pieces that students can perform or showcase at local schools and other venues during anti-bullying week.
  • Invite peer mentoring programmes from local schools to make presentations in your assemblies during anti-bullying week
  • Invite students to help you update your school anti-bullying policy
  • Ask every student in the school to think of one idea to tackle bullying, which they write down on a piece of paper. You then collate all the answers, taking out similar ones, write up in to a document and present to the students
  • As above but a selection of students present the ideas in an active way such as through a drama
  • Have students write anti-bullying letters and other creative accounts of bullying which are sent to local media, press and MP's
  • Create or update the schools anti-bullying resources for the students which can be highlighted during anti-bullying week. Resources can include anti-bullying telephone help-line, bully box, anti-bullying policy, peer mentoring programme, anti-bullying website.
  • Hold an anti-bullying art competition
  • Get teachers and students from each department in the school to create a different anti-bullying resource that can be presented during assembly in anti-bullying week. For example the maths department could research and create a list of bullying statistics. The history department could research and document a history of anti-bullying work in the local area, the drama department could create an anti-bullying show to be performed and so on
  • Create an anti-bullying school magazine
  • Join up with other schools in your area and organise an anti-bullying conference for the students
  • Hold a 'Swap Roles' Day. Students teach the teachers about how they would like bullying dealt with in the school
  • Update your school's anti-bullying policy - get a group of you together and agree what you want in the policy, then present these to your Head of Year or Head of school

If you have a budget, Actionwork can help you organise any or all of the following:

  • Your own in-house anti-bullying conference
  • Specialist anti-bullying workshops
  • Anti-bullying music competiiton
  • Anti-bullying art or poster competition
  • Anti-bullying week festival
  • Anti-bullying week shows
  • Anti bullying week films
http://www.antibullyingweek.co.uk/

This is a good campaign to look into as it is a week of events to raise awareness for bullying, which is much like our plan to hold a boots for troops campaign.

Posted By: Lottie Mather

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