| Literature DB >> 35669742 |
Abstract
The rise of computational social science provides a new method for campus bullying research based on large-scale data collection, calculation and analysis. Governing the bullying behavior of a middle school through social intervention, and closely observe the service needs and existing problems of the school youth group. This paper analyzes the characteristics, inducements and negative effects of school bullying. Combine drama courses and working group education methods to intervene in school bullying. Intervention work includes making teenagers aware of bullying behavior and identifying bullying types. To achieve the purpose of empathy through role play, bullies can effectively control irrational thoughts, understand their own cognitive biases, and reconcile their own emotions and behaviors. So that the victims can identify the bullying behavior around them in time, and cultivate their resistance and self-protection awareness in the event of bullying. Based on the empirical analysis of social work to intervene in the practical dilemma, and put forward the corresponding countermeasures to reduce the negative impact of school bullying on all aspects of youth, so as to reduce the various social risks brought by school bullying.Entities:
Keywords: behavioral interventions; big data; drama education; school bullying; social work; teenagers
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35669742 PMCID: PMC9163334 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.881124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Group services and demand analysis.
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| Seventh grade students | 1. Environmental adaptation needs: freshmen in the seventh grade cannot adapt to the middle school life due to the changes in learning content, work and rest rules and campus environment. |
| 2. Running-in needs for interpersonal communication: Because teenagers are in a special stage of growth and development, belonging to the running in period of self and society, their hearts are more sensitive, it is difficult to integrate into the collective and establish a stable interpersonal relationship with classmates. | |
| 3. Adolescent attention needs: Grade 7 students are in a critical period of physical and psychological development, which can also be called the rebellious period. During this period, great changes occur in body and mind, which requires more attention from parents and teachers. | |
| Eighth grade students | 1. Running-in needs of interpersonal communication: Grade 8 students have not left the growth and development period of teenagers, so it is difficult for them to integrate into the group and establish a stable interpersonal relationship with their classmates, and some bullying behaviors may occur. |
| 2. Adolescent Guidance Needs: Grade 8 students have adapted to their physical and mental changes during adolescence. However, due to their ignorance of the opposite sex, they tend to have puppy love or stay away from the opposite sex. | |
| 3. Learning objective planning needs: Due to the physical and mental changes, the eighth grade students' attention is easy to be shifted, it is difficult to focus on learning, lack of learning goals and learning motivation, so they can not keep up with the curriculum, resulting in inferiority complex. | |
| Ninth grade students | Planning of learning direction: Grade 9 students have initially formed an independent personality. Due to the change of puberty, students are focusing on interpersonal relationship, which leads to their loss of learning goals and motivation, and they have no specific plan for future study. |
Special group services and needs analysis.
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| Students | 1. Adapting Habits: As the student still has the habits brought by the former campus and interpersonal environment, these habits may be in conflict with the habits of the students in the current campus, such as hygiene habits, work and rest rules, dialect, etc., which hinders the student's integration and adaptation in the new environment. |
| 2. The need to enhance family attention: due to the changes of study and interpersonal environment, students are more sensitive and prone to inferiority, so parents need to pay more attention to the changes. | |
| 3. The need for acceptance among classmates: due to the changes in the new environment, students hope to make new friends as soon as possible and keep up with the new pace of study, so they need to be accepted by classmates. | |
| Poor students | 1. Increase the need for self-confidence: due to the lack of economic conditions, poor students are very likely to have a sense of inferiority, or extreme conceit. |
| 2. Material needs: Compared with other types of student groups, poor students lack material conditions more. They need basic material conditions from their families to reduce the gap between them and their classmates. | |
| Students with different behaviors | 1. Constraint and guidance needs: Because parents and teachers do not pay attention to students' different behaviors, students do not know that some of their behaviors are wrong, resulting in students' cognitive and behavioral bias. |
| 2. The need to be tolerated: because their individual behaviors are not understood, other students will label them, and even discriminate against and misinterpret them. Therefore, such students need to be treated with tolerance. |
Working group activities and establishment of group relations.
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| Section I | Working group goal: the team members are familiar with each other, understand each other, establish the working group goal. | Sand table, white paper, marker pen, sand ware |
| 1. Introduction to staff and members | ||
| 2. Use sand table and sand painting activities to organize group members' internal interaction and improve group members' sense of identity. | ||
| 3. Determine the activity content and stage goal of the working group, and obtain the expected effect of the team members on the working group. | ||
| 4. Establish the contract of the working group and the implementation standard of the activity | ||
| 5. Notice in the next section. |
Campus bullying identification course.
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| Section 2 | Working group goal: To enable all team members to identify what constitutes bullying and to distinguish the types of bullying. | Stool |
| 1. The warm-up game: Who's undercover | ||
| 2. Discuss in pairs, put forward what you think about school bullying, and share your understanding of drama courses. | ||
| 3. Play the school bullying movie “Teenage You”, share your impressions and introduce the bullying knowledge in it. | ||
| 4. Pause some scenes in the movie, and analyze the type characteristics of such bullying behaviors. | ||
| 5. Summary speech and the next section notice. |
The unrational behavior courses for understanding the bullying self.
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| Section 3 (Bullies) | Task group goal: Make the bully aware of his irrational thoughts | Work notes |
| 1. Ask the bully in the group to share the irrational thoughts that they have on a daily basis and explain why. | ||
| 2. Use the self-questioning method to ask the school bully some of his own irrational thoughts, do I have to do this? If I was injured, what should I do? And discuss new solutions with everyone. | ||
| 3. Through some irrational behaviors in real life, this paper analyzes the thinking process of self rhetorical question through cases, and then puts forward a reasonable approach through discussion. | ||
| 4. Make a summary speech and encourage the bullying participants to make a difference. | ||
| 5. In the next section. |
Emotional control and interpersonal skills.
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| Section IV (Bullies) | Working Group's goal: to enable school bullies to effectively control their emotions and acquire interpersonal skills. | Work notes, water pens |
| 1. In the emotional more excited, through effective skills to gradually calm down. | ||
| 2. Role-playing is adopted to set up a specific social environment so that the bully can play a student who can solve his own emotional problems. | ||
| 3. Express yourself in soothing, gentle, and polite language by introducing your ideas. | ||
| 4. Summarize the speech and affirm the change of the bully's behavior. |
Behavior lying of bullied behavior.
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| Section V (Bullying) | Working group goals: To understand the thoughts of the bullied, analyze the bully's situation and behavioral attributions. | Work notes, water pens |
| 1. The victim shares their positive energy of being brave in life. | ||
| 2. Games: the right interpretation. | ||
| 3. Examples are given to illustrate some thinking patterns and behavioral logics in the individual environment of different team members. | ||
| 4. Conduct behavioral attribution questionnaire and boundary perception expression | ||
| 5. Play teaching videos “Know Yourself” and “Battle for Snacks” to analyze the time, roles, emotions, ideas and influences in the videos. | ||
| 6. How can I protect myself after sharing lessons. | ||
| 7. Summarize the speech and encourage the victims to fight back and seek help. |
Say no to bullying on campus.
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| Section 6 (All team members) | Working Group Goal: Show how the bully's real thoughts can be expressed properly through role play, and how the bullied can say no in the face of school bullying. | Camera, camera, work notes, time capsule model |
| 1. Theater stage performance. | ||
| 2. Each team member writes a letter from his heart, puts it in a time capsule, and buries it in the campus together. | ||
| 3. The staff members share and summarize the changes of the team members in the activity. | ||
| 4. Take photos to commemorate. | ||
| 5. Finish the job. |
Drama course effect self—scaletitle.
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| I can identify the types of bullying on campus. | 6 | 100 |
| I learned about drama classes | 6 | 100 |
| I can control my irrational thoughts | 5 | 83.3 |
| I've mastered interpersonal skills | 6 | 100 |
| I learned what to do when there is bullying on campus | 6 | 100 |
| I can handle my ideas in the right and reasonable way | 4 | 66.6 |
| I can lead by example and be a peace elite | 5 | 83.3 |
| I learned that escape or violence is not the right solution | 6 | 100 |
| I understand how unreasonable some of the past behavior, I will control or protect themselves. | 6 | 100 |
| I think drama course can effectively control campus bullying | 4 | 66.6 |
| I would like to continue to participate in the activities organized by the social working group | 5 | 83.3 |