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18. Bullying

18. Bullying

JDDC SHORT MODEL BULLYING PLAN 

USD 253 Bullying Plan (Also see Policies GAAE and JDDC) 

Bullying means: Any intentional gesture or any intentional written, verbal, electronic, or physical act or threat either by any student, staff member, or parent towards a student or by any student, staff member or parent towards a staff member that is sufficiently severe, persistent, or pervasive that it creates an intimidating, threatening, or abusive educational environment that a reasonable person, under the circumstances, knows or should know will have the effect of: 

● Harming a student or staff member, whether physically or mentally; 

● Damaging a student’s or staff member’s property: 

● Placing a student or staff member in reasonable fear of harm; or 

● Placing a student or staff member in reasonable fear of damage to the student’s or staff 

member’s property. 

Bullying also includes cyberbullying. "Cyberbullying" means bullying by use of any electronic communication device through means including, but not limited to, e-mail, instant messaging, text messages, blogs, mobile phones, pagers, online games, and websites. Additionally, bullying means any form of intimidation or harassment prohibited by the board of education of the school district in policies concerning bullying adopted pursuant to K.S.A. 72-6147 or subsection (e) of K.S.A. 72-1138, and amendments thereto. USD 253 will not tolerate these actions by students, staff, or parents. For the purposes of this plan and its authorizing policies, “parent” includes a biological, adoptive, or step-parent; guardian; custodian; or other person with authority to act on behalf of a student. Similarly, a “staff member” means any person employed by the district. Any act of bullying by either an individual student or group of students towards a student or staff member of the district is prohibited on or while utilizing school property, in a school vehicle, or at school-sponsored activities, programs, and events. This policy applies to students who directly engage in an act of bullying, to students who, by their behavior, support another student’s act of bullying, and to all staff members and parents who engage in similar behaviors. 

Training concerning identifying, reporting, investigating, and preventing bullying behaviors as outlined in district policies and this plan shall be provided to students and staff members using district resources available for such purpose and shall be provided through school assemblies, staff development, or other appropriate forums at least biannually. USD 253 focuses on bullying prevention by: 1. Developing a bullying prevention program based on the KSDE Bullying Prevention Resource Toolkit including addressing bullying, building adult capacity to change climate and culture, curriculum and instructional resources, and measuring social -emotional learning; 

2. Using the Kansas State Department of Education’s Social - Emotional and Character Development Standards to address school bullying and student mental health; 

3. Implementing a social- emotional learning curriculum that includes an anti-bullying family engagement component; 4. Providing students and families with information and resources annually on bullying, cyberbullying, digital citizenship and how to make smart choices on-line; 

5. Providing students and families with the district’s student behavior expectations relating to bullying and explanations for incidences that do not meet the legal definition of bullying; 

6. Tracking incidences of bullying including physical, cyber, verbal, and relational bullying and reporting this information to the Kansas State Board of Education. 

7. Collecting data on bullying incidents from social emotional data sources and annually reviewing this information with the board of education; 

8. Developing cultural awareness and understanding that certain demographic groups are disproportionately bullied at a higher rate than peers based upon sex, disability, socio-economic status, religious beliefs, gender identity and expression, sexual-orientation, and race/ethnicity (including migrant populations); 

9. Requiring all school employees to complete the following bullying prevention, identification, reporting and training module (describe district’s annual training program).