YOUTH ADVISORS
If you interact with youth in your work as a volunteer or youth leader, you may be well-positioned to prevent bullying and to lend support when bullying occurs. Too often children cope with the cruelties of other youth in silence out of fear that they will suffer greater humiliation and harm if word gets out that they shared their concerns with an adult. These fears regrettably are reasonable if their confidante doesn’t believe them, minimizes the incident, or neglects to Stop Bullying Now!
In the Youth Advisors pages, we hope you will:
- Learn about bullying and its effects on those who bully and who are bullied
- Be prepared by knowing how to respond if you are aware of or suspect bullying
- Learn some strategies to use to help prevent, detect and address bullying
- Begin by studying the facts about bullying to dispel the myths.
The Campaign has many Tip Sheets to explain what we know about bullying taken from the latest research and proven best practice methods. Some that you may find useful are:
- Why Should Adults Care About Bullying?
- What We Know about Bullying?
- The Scope and Impact of Bullying
- Myths About Bullying
- Research-Based Articles and Books on Bully/Peer Victimization
- Become skilled as a first-responder in dealing with problems of bullying among youth.
One trusted adult who knows what signs to look for and asks the right questions can make a difference for the child victim and the perpetrator. Preventing long-term occurrences will lesson the effects and reverse destructive behaviors before they become engrained and escalate. For information on how to detect these tell-tale symptoms, review the Tip Sheets Warning Signs a Child is Being Bullied and Children Who Bully.
- Consider ways to bully-proof the setting where you work, volunteer or where youth tend to gather.
Specific tips for youth-serving professionals and volunteers are available:
Bullying in Out-of-School Time Programs: Tips for Youth-Serving Professionals and Volunteers
Adults working at youth centers, recreation parks, sports leagues, after school programs and summer camps can apply most of the same safeguards as schools. Visit the Educators page to consider what advice and ideas may apply. Here are several suggestions that may be appropriate:
- Implement proven methods of bullying prevention.
- Best Practices in Bullying Prevention and Intervention
- Providing Support to Children Who are Bullied: Tips for School Personnel
- How to Intervene to Stop Bullying: Tips for On-the-Spot Interventions at School
- Misdirections in Bullying Prevention and Intervention
- Integrate bullying prevention themes across the curriculum.
Think creatively of ways that you can weave bullying themes into your instructions, games, and activities. Visit the Starting a Campaign page to find bullying prevention books, videos, and other materials that you might use. You might find it helpful to print out our Tip Sheet on Tips for Selecting Materials from the Resource List.
Request a free copy of the SBN! Activities Guide which outlines ways to involve youth in building awareness about bullying within their neighborhoods and communities. Additional information on how to launch a local campaign is found in What Communities Are Doing.
- Take time to listen to the concerns of youth about everyday issues related to bullying and peer relations.
- If possible, show Stop Bullying Now! Webisodes to spark discussion.
- Print out the Tip Sheets What Should I Do if I’m Bullied? and What Can Students/Youth Do to "Lend a Hand?" and discuss them with your students.
- Post Stop Bullying Now! Posters where they are viewable to groups of youth as points of discussion and as reminders.
- Implement proven methods of bullying prevention.
Several Tip Sheets are available for particular settings; see if they apply to you:
- Community-Based Bullying Prevention: Tips for Community Members
- Understanding Bullying Within the Camp Setting: Tips for Parents





