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March 3, 2014 - 3:42pm
There are important lessons on both bullying and speaking up that are happening right in front of our eyes. Recently, leading anti-bullying expert Emily Brazelton shared the results of the bullying investigation for the Miami Dolphins, after the pro football team’s bullying scandal. It serves as a case study to help everyone understand tackle Jonathan Martin’s courage to speak up and open his personal struggles to the world, which will help all of us learn the terrible impact of bullying, hate, racist and homophobic teasing.
February 28, 2014 - 2:03pm
Colleges across the country continue to experience incidents of racially-motivated hate. A recent New York Times article, “Colorblind Notion Aside, Colleges Grapple With Racial Tension,” speaks to the uncomfortable reality of racial tension on college campuses, which is sparking a new wave of student activism. Schools can be more proactive in preventing hate crimes through diversity training for faculty, establishing an office of campus diversity, and by incorporating diversity research in the faculty tenure process, according to a recent report by sociologist Susan Murray. San Jose State University is re-evaluating Murray’s recommendations after a recent high profile hate crime in the school’s freshman dorms.
February 26, 2014 - 5:17pm
Chris Seifert, director of educational services for Montana PBS, teaches students how to conduct an interview during a class at the Billings Public Library. The students will interview people involved in the Not In Our Town movement. Photo Credit: Billings Gazette Billings, MT students engage in a project to tell stories about Not In Our Town through video and other media, including their town’s successful efforts to stand up to white supremacist hate crimes, according to the Billings Gazette.
February 25, 2014 - 2:25pm
  By Dana Schuster We are all painfully aware that we live in a culture rife with judgment and bias, and a disturbing tendency to pit one group or viewpoint against another. While voices have recently been increasing in volume that say we must acknowledge and combat stigma and bullying, particularly among our youth, consider, if you will, the following scenarios.
February 19, 2014 - 4:08pm
By Mark Liston As a kid, I got beat up at home by dad and mom. I’d go to school and get beat up there too. I tried to take different routes when I walked home so the bullies wouldn’t find me.  I lived in fear and didn’t like it. Now, as a dad of four kids and a professional counselor, I wanted to do something to deal with bullying. I read research that said even today teachers often ignore or don’t notice bullying. Someone told me no standard was available to answer, “What is and is not bullying? How serious is the incident?”