• Bully Prevention

    What is bullying?

    "Bullying among students is aggressive behavior that is intentional and that involves an imbalance of power or strength.  A child who is being bullied has a harder time defending him or herself.  Usually, bullying is repeated over time.  Bullying can take many forms, such as hitting or punching (physical); teasing or name-calling (verbal); intimidation using gestures or social exclusion (nonverbal or emotional); and sending insulting messages by phone, computer or email (cyberbullying)."    -- US Dept. of Health & Human Services

    At Steck, reports of bullying are taken seriously and investigated.  Using that information, age-appropriate interventions and consequences are given to help teach and reinforce the school wide expectations: be respectful, be responsible, be safe, and be ready.in each area of the school.

    Steck also has an evidence and research based bully prevention program titled: Stop-Walk-Talk.  Students and staff are taught how to respond and use to the signals and language in Stop-Walk-Talk.  More information is available on the "Parents" tab. 

    The most current research available tells us that bystanders play the most crucial role in reducing and eliminating bullying from all schools.  When student and adult bystanders use stop-walk-talk, report bullying behaviors, learn resiliency, and recognize the different types of bullying (i.e. verbal, excluding others, physical, etc), it shifts the empowerment and attention a bully thrives on, and returns it to the students of a safe and peaceful school.

  • For Parents

  • For Staff