Bully Prevention Program Gets Positive Results

Topeka, Kan.-- Preliminary results from the three-year Peaceful Schools research project, conducted by the Menninger Child and Family Center, show that while bullying has, in the past, been an accepted part of any student's school experience, it does not have to be tolerated. Students and school staff can learn alternatives to dealing with difference and conflict.

"Not only is bullying frequently the cause of distress, it is also the known precursor of much more serious school violence," said Peter Fonagy, PhD, director of the Menninger Child and Family Center. "Preventing bullying is a key step in reducing violence in our schools."

The Menninger Peaceful Schools research project, which began in 1999, is believed to be the most ambitious privately-funded study of its kind. It was designed to compare an anti-violence/bullying intervention to an intervention that focused on individual students and schools conducting business as usual. Researchers aimed to determine which intervention was more effective at reducing bully-victim problems.

Schools were divided into three intervention study groups, including an anti- violence/bullying intervention. This environmental intervention focused on the entire school climate with the behaviors and attitudes of all persons in a school building (students, teachers, even administrative and other support staff). The intervention assumed all could potentially be part of the solution. Preliminary findings indicate that this group was the more effective of the three interventions. Some of the findings from the student are:

" The effects of the anti-violence/bullying intervention on children's social behavior, thoughts and emotions depends in part on individual teachers' acceptance and use of the program. Some teachers are more enthusiastic and supportive of this type of intervention than others. Evidence shows that the beneficial effects are more apparent for children in classrooms with teachers who expressed greater use of the program philosophy, strategies and techniques.

Dr. Peter Fonagy was the principal investigator on the project. He collaborated with co-principal investigators, Stuart Twemlow, M.D., Menninger staff psychiatrist, and Eric Vernberg, PhD, a professor in Clinical Child Psychology at the University of Kansas. The project involved 11 elementary schools, over 300 teachers and 3,000 students.

Menninger is taking the next step to develop an implementation protocol for other school districts to use. Support for this project has been provided by a grant from the Jessie Ball duPont Fund in Jacksonville, Florida. District representatives from a diverse sampling of schools from across the nation are consulting on the project. Most schools are using some type of bullying or violence prevention programs. "A great deal of wisdom can be gained from the experiences districts have had training, implementing and bringing their own districts on board to this type of thinking," said Fonagy.

"Our principal hope is that early intervention in elementary schools will create a cascade effect that carries into middle schools and high schools."

What is Menninger?

Menninger is a national psychiatric and behavioral healthcare hospital located in Topeka, Kansas. Founded in 1925, Menninger offers specialty hospital treatment programs for adolescents and adults, and research and training for mental health professionals.

For more information about Menninger and its programs, visit their website.

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