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7: Coach Z

May 21, 2011 by Sarah

This is the seventh post in a series about my son’s recent experience with bullying at school.

One day last week Sam’s PE teacher, Coach Z, came up to me and said that there is a girl, Janette who is picking on Sam relentlessly, laughing at Sam and making nasty comments. She just won’t stop, he told me. I asked him to separate them, and he said he already had.

The next day, Sam came home and said that because Janette had been moved so far away from Sam that she could no longer say anything to him without being overheard, she started throwing balls at his head.

We emailed Coach Z. We emailed Sam’s teacher. We emailed the principal. We waited for nothing meaningful to be done.

And you know what? Coach Z sent us an email the next day saying he’d launched an anti-bullying program in PE.

He said that this isn’t just an issue between Sam and Janette. He said that bullying involves a bully-victim-bystander relationship, and sent us online links so we could learn more about this concept. And he said that he would conduct classroom sessions using the curriculum from BrainPOP to increase all students’ awareness of how to avoid bullying in PE. “If someone is ignoring bullying and not taking action,” Coach Z said, “they are no different from the bully.”

He also talked about how Sam can make better choices about engaging in a bullying situation, and suggested things we can talk to Sam about to facilitate his learning.

Coach Z doesn’t know we’re organizing parents and trying to get the school to implement a comprehensive anti-bullying program. He didn’t get the principal’s approval to launch a new program. He didn’t consult anyone. He just said: enough. I’m going to do something about this. And he did.

I love you, Coach Z.

 

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Filed Under: Sarah Hoffman's Blog Tagged With: "gender variant" "gender nonconforming" "gender spectrum" "parenting", "sarah hoffman", bullying, parenting, pink boy, school bullying

6: Parents

May 18, 2011 by Sarah

This is the sixth post in a series about my son’s recent experience with bullying at school.

After our inspiring meeting with the school counselor, we picked out a handful of the awesomest parents we know at our school and wrote them this email:

We are writing to ask for your help in making change at our school.

Our third grade son, Sam, has been bullied for his differences since he started kindergarten. Primarily he’s been targeted for his gender expression, but recently it’s also moved to body type and other issues. Sometimes it’s his classmates harassing him; other times it’s children in higher and lower grades.

We have attempted to work with the administration for the past four years, requesting both immediate help for Sam and a school-wide anti-bullying curriculum. The school responds effectively to acute problems—the classroom teachers, especially, have been fantastic—but there has been no effort to do the work necessary to prevent the bullying from happening in the first place.

To give you two examples of what Sam has faced: he has been kicked and yelled at in the bathroom by younger students who were alarmed to see someone in the bathroom they didn’t think was supposed to be there. Sam was forced to show his genitals to an older student in the boy’s room, to prove he had a right to be there. These things are not the fault of the kids involved. They are the fault of an administration who—alerted to Sam’s previous problems in the boy’s bathroom—did nothing to teach kids how to respond appropriately to this situation.

In recent weeks, the bullying has escalated for Sam, and he is now being harassed by kids in third grade who have never bothered him in the past, in addition to kids who have a history of bullying. We don’t fault these kids, or their parents. But we wonder, just how bad does it have to get for Sam before the administration thinks it’s important to address the problem on a larger scale?

Kids are bullied for many different reasons; Sam is certainly not alone in the world, nor at our school. Bullying affects every one of our children, and every one of us as their parents. None of us want our kids to be bullied, to bully other children, or to stand idly by as their friends are hurt. We have, for the last four years, considered Sam’s bullying to be our own private issue. A friend and fellow parent pointed out recently that this is not the case—that we are all affected, that we can reach out to ask for help, and that asking for help—to a broader group of people than we have in the past—is the right thing to do. Not only to protect our child, but to help build a more loving, accepting community.

This morning we met with the school counselor to discuss our options. He was incredibly supportive. To our surprise, he recommended that we convene a group of parents to discuss how to move forward with bringing anti-bullying curriculum to the school, and he offered to host this meeting.

We are inviting you because you are parents who we believe are concerned about this issue.  We are not so much interested in discussing specific instances of bullying, but rather brainstorming solutions to help the school develop policies and procedures for future bullying prevention work. We also need fellow parents to help the administration understand that this issue is important not just to our family, but to the whole community.

And you know what? Every. single. one. of those parents wrote back with words of support, encouragement, and/or a commitment to get involved.

My heart is just about a-bursting.

 

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Filed Under: Sarah Hoffman's Blog Tagged With: "sarah hoffman", bullying, gender nonconforming, gender variance, LGBT, parenting, pink boy

5: Counsel

May 12, 2011 by Sarah

This is the fifth post in a series about my son’s recent experience with bullying at school.

Last week, we went to see the school counselor.

We sat in his office and told him about how in addition to the kids who have bullied Sam for years, Sam has been harassed by an all new crop of kids recently. We said that our four years of requests for preventive anti-bullying curriculum—and offers of resources—have gone unheeded. We said the “radical kindness” the admissions director talked about on our school tour that was supposedly intrinsic to the school’s values is not radical at all; it’s retrograde.

We told him that we realize we now have three choices: leave the school, stay and tell Sam that’s he’s got to put up with it, or to stay and change the school.

And you know what our counselor said? He said it’s time to rally the troops. That we need to form an advisory counsel of parents to work with the school. That there is power in numbers. That this parent group can help look into best practices and find out what other schools are doing that’s really working to combat bullying. That he believes it’s essential that the school do this work.

Clearly, he said, the school needs something new, because whatever else has been tried is stagnant. Not just a program, he said, but something deeply and pervasively rooted in every aspect of the curriculum. He told us it’s time to find our allies among parents and on the faculty and staff, and to make something happen together.

He offered to let a group of parents meet in his office, and he offered to facilitate the meeting. We talked about letting the administration know, so we’re not doing anything behind their backs.

And then he added: “If this doesn’t resolve by next year, get the hell out.”

When a friend told us to start talking to other parents, I’d pictured some clandestine meeting of a few friends in our living room, to secretly organize some…I don’t even know what. Instead, the school counselor advised us to organize other parents, on a big scale, and to make our work public. And he said he’d host us.

A whole new world just opened up.

 

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Filed Under: Sarah Hoffman's Blog Tagged With: "gender variant" "gender nonconforming" "gender spectrum" "parenting", "it gets better", "sarah hoffman", bullying, pink boy

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