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Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 1
Bullying Awareness Week: November 16-22, 2015
A resource for schools
Adapted from the resource, ‘Reverencing the Dignity of All’, created by the Renfrew
county Catholic School District.
Background: The theme for Bullying Awareness Week is “Stand Up”. Jesus stood up for us. He showed us
unconditional Love and called on us to love others as He loves us. He is our joy. He lives in the heart of each one
of us, and so, we treat each other with reverence and kindness. In this way, our acts of kindness show our
reverence for Jesus.
Daily Theme Outline & Picture books being used
Day Theme Picture Book
Monday Stand up for Peace What does Peace Feel like By Vladimir Radunsky
Tuesday Stand up for Acceptance Spaghetti in a Hot Dog Bun By Maria Dismondy
Wednesday Stand up and be Noble Mr. Peabody’s Apples By Madonna
Thursday Stand up for Kindness Each Kindness By Jacqueline Woodson
Friday Stand up with St. Francis Adventures in Assisi By Amy Welborn
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 2
Table of Contents
Monday Prayers Page 3
Monday Activity Page 4
Tuesday Prayers Page 6
Tuesday Activities Page 7
Wednesday Prayers Page 9
Wednesday Activities Page 10
Thursday Prayers Page 12
Thursday Activities Page 13
Friday Prayers Page 15
Friday Activities Page 16
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 3
Monday, November 16
Morning Announcement:
Stand up for Peace- Today we focus on being peaceful. Being Peaceful ends bullying by building
relationships and understanding. Being peaceful means I am not being aggressive or fighting with
others. If I am peaceful, I am playing with my friends and enjoying my time with others. When
somebody is being teased or made fun of in the school, do I stand by? Do I join in? Do I seek help? Am
I a peacemaker?
Listen to the words of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew:
“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God.” (Mt 5:9)
Jesus calls all of us his friends. He showed us how to live as friends by laying down his life for us. He
calls each of us to live his command to love one another, by putting aside unkind words, by never
saying or doing anything that would hurt anyone else; by being an example of friendship and welcome
with everyone, especially those who feel left out. Let us live in the love of Jesus as friends.
Please join me in our morning prayer.
Lord, help us to be Peaceful in our daily thoughts, words and acts. Together, let us pray the prayer of
St. Francis and ask for help to be peaceful.
Lord, make me an instrument of your peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen
End of the day Announcement:
Today we focused on being peaceful, remembering the words of Jesus, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they
shall be called children of God”.
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 4
Monday Activities for Teachers/Students:
The following lesson plan was taken from the Teach Peace Now website.
Grade Level: Kindergarten through high school
Introduction
Peace begins in our hearts and our minds, but must be fostered by the actions we take. Young children
need to know that adults value a peaceful world and are willing to work towards this goal.
Procedure
1. Read students What Does Peace Feel Like.
2. Brainstorm a list of ways students could help create a more peaceful school, community, and world.
3. Pass out dove patterns (template below) and invite students to write their ideas on the dove. Younger
children can draw themselves acting as a peacemaker.
4. End by hanging up the doves in the classroom or school. Keep the list of ideas the children
brainstormed and put stars next to an idea each time student, or someone in the school, community or
world (check the news) carries out the idea.
Here is how one school carried out
this project.
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 6
Tuesday November 17
Morning Announcement:
Be Accepting: Today we focus on being accepting. Being accepting ends bullying by making sure that
everyone feels comfortable and accepted, and that no one is excluded or isolated. Being accepting
means that we go out of our way to make connections with all of the people we meet each day, not just
those that we count as our friends. If I am being accepting, it means that I know that each person I meet
is important. When someone is being left out, do I try to include them? Do I make the effort to make
sure that everyone feels that they belong? Am I including every one as God asks us to do?
Listen to the words of the prophet Jeremiah.
Here, God says to Jeremiah: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I
consecrated you; I appointed you a prophet to the nations.” (Jer 1, 4-5)
God knew us before we were born. He brought each of us into the world for a special reason. And so,
we must always include and treat each other with love and respect, because God has a special place for
all of us in his great plan.
Please join me in our morning prayer.
Lord, help us to be accepting in our daily thoughts, words and acts. Together let us pray the prayer of
St. Francis and ask for help to be accepting.
Lord, make me an instrument of your peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen
End of the Day Announcement:
Today we focused on being accepting, and remembering to build community with each other by
remembering the words of St. Paul to the Romans: ‘We are one body in Christ’.
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 7
Tuesday Activities for Teachers/Students:
The following lesson plan was taken from Education world website.
Brief Description
Students use the activity of building a necklace to learn more about each other and explore diversity.
Time: 45 minutes
Materials Needed
Bowl of different styles of beads to string on a necklace
Piece of jute or material (boondoggle) for stringing the beads
Small envelope for each student with a small piece of paper in it
Book: Spaghetti in a Hot Dog Bun by Author Maria Dismondy
Preparation
1. Put a small piece of paper in each envelope.
2. Collect a variety of beads. Send a note home, ask the teacher, or go to a craft store. You may
be able to get a donation since a school is a non-profit, but plan for the donation process to
take a few weeks.
3. Make sure the beads fit on the necklace material.
4. (Optional) Choose a book to read following the lesson (see resources at end).
Lesson Plan
Part 1: Reading the book and Making the Unity Necklace (10 minutes)
1. Read the story Spaghetti in a Hot dog bun by Maria Dismondy
2. Discuss the message of the story.
3. Individual choice. Everyone will choose a bead that he or she likes. Ask students to think
about the reason they chose their bead.
4. Envelopes. Pass out the envelopes and have each student put his bead in his envelope and
write his name on the inside flap. Do not seal the envelope, just tuck the flap.
5. Redistribute. Collect the envelopes and then give each student someone else’s. To keep the
interest level high for the following discussion, ask students not to look inside yet.
Part 2: Discussion Points (35 minutes)
1. Individual differences: Each of us picked a different bead. We each have different thoughts
about what our favorite color might be, what might taste good, or to what music we like to
listen. What do you think about that?
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 8
So as we look around at each other, we can see difference among us in hair color, eye color,
body size. In what other ways are we different?
Do you think it would be better if we were all the same? Would that make a better group?
Think about a family. Let‘s say that everyone in the family is very good at playing with the
younger kids. But no one is good at cooking. How about if everyone is very good at eating
dinner, but no one is good at going to the store to buy food?
2. List: Let’s list on the board some differences about people. For example, some of us are
quite helpful, or friendly, or cheerful, or brave.
3. Challenge: Now here is a challenge for you. Each of you will get an envelope with
someone's name on it. Don’t let anyone see whose envelope you have. Take out the piece of
paper and write one strength or positive thing you have noticed about that person. Give
some examples: A person can be polite, helpful, good at music, or a strong athlete. And yes,
sometimes it’s a little difficult to find that positive thing about someone — but take the
challenge and try!
4. Collect the envelopes. Sit in a circle. Open each envelope and read the name and the
comment. If it’s not kind, please do not share it. The person who wrote the unkind comment
will get the message that it was not appropriate.
5. Necklace: As you read each one, the student will put his bead on the necklace. Ask a student
who needs to be involved (maybe someone with attention issues) to hold the necklace for
the class.
6. Reactions: Why do you think we made this necklace? You‘ve created this teaching
opportunity – don’t lose it to a lecture on diversity. Listen to the student ideas. Guide as
needed, but let them find the points. Hang the necklace in a central spot.
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 9
Wednesday, November 18
Morning Announcement:
Be Noble: Today we focus on being noble. Being noble ends bullying because if we are being noble,
we are careful and respectful of each person’s dignity and pride. Being noble means that we do not
engage in gossip, cyberbullying or the spreading of rumours that could hurt someone else. If I am being
noble it means that I recognize the greatness of all of God’s children and that I treat others with the
compassion that God treats us with. When I hear a story or rumour about someone else do I repeat it?
Do I get involved in destroying the reputation of others or do I act in a noble way and refuse to
participate in these activities?
Listen to the words of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew:
“In everything do to others as you would have them do to you; for this is the law and the prophets.” (Mt
7, 12)
Jesus tells us that when we treat each other with kindness, we are living by God’s law. Let us ask Jesus
to help us to live his law of love by treating one another as brothers and sisters, sons and daughters of
God.
Please join me in our morning prayer
Lord, help us to be noble in our daily thoughts, words and acts. Together let us pray the prayer of St.
Francis and ask for help to be noble:
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen
End of the Day Announcement:
Today we focused on being noble. If we are noble, then we are living as St. Paul described to the
Ephesians, “Be imitators of God, as beloved children.”
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 10
Wednesday Activities for Teachers/Students:
Plan adapted from Lesson by Kristen Savage
Book Title: Mr. Peabody’s Apples; Author: Madonna
Anticipatory Set: (How will you get their attention and activate schema or background knowledge?)
Line up children in a row across the room. Starting at one side of the room tell the children that
you are going to whisper something very important into the first students ear. Tell that that when it gets
to the end of the line that their homework will be given regarding the message.
When the last person receives the message have them whisper it in your ear. Then write the
original message up on the board and have the children come sit back on the carpet. Write what the
message was turned into by going through so many people. Talk about how drastic it was changed and
how the importance of the message was changed as it got passed along.
Listening Focus: (What should the students focus on as they listen?)
Explain to the children that you would like them to listen for the lesson Mr. Peabody teaches the
boys on the baseball team.
Method for Sharing: (How will you present the story?)
Read the story all the way through…Then discuss listening focus.
Instruction: (How will you teach about the intended concept and how will students apply and practice
the concept (can use concrete object here)?
Ask the children how they thought the lesson of honesty Mr. Peabody taught everyone might be
connected to the telephone chain before they read the book. Help them make the connection that just as
important things can become distorted we need to always remember to tell the truth and not things that
might have been passed along or changed. Talk about what honesty means and where we can be
honest.
Give the children each a feather and ask them why you might have given that to them. After
discussing the symbol it represented in the story by Madonna have them take it home to put somewhere
in their room that they would see and remember what it stood for. Have them explain it to their parents
about what they learned about.
Activity:
Have students choose one of the activity cards to do.
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 11
Activity Cards:
Mr. Peabody’s Apples
Activity #1
Make a list of the main events
that occurred in the book we
read, titled “Mr. Peabody’s
Apples”. Don’t forget to record
what happened at the beginning
of the book, what happened in
the middle of the book and what
happened at the end of the book.
Blooms Level: Knowledge
Mr. Peabody’s Apples
Activity#2
Paint or draw some aspect of the
story that you liked. Remember
to do your nicest quality of work
and take time to review the story
if you have a hard time
remembering something to
draw.
Blooms Level: Comprehension
Mr. Peabody’s Apples
Activity#3
Do you think that the story of
Mr. Peabody’s Apples could
have occurred in real life?
Think about it and write your
reflection and talk about why or
why not you think it could take
place in real life.
Blooms Level: Application
Mr. Peabody’s Apples
Activity#4
Write about your feelings in
relation to the book we read in
class. How do you think Mr.
Peabody felt when people were
spreading rumors that weren’t
true? Think of a time when
people said things about you
that weren’t true. How did this
make you feel?
Blooms Level: Synthesis
Mr. Peabody’s Apples
Activity#5
What was the turning point in
the story? Think back to what
happened and specifically when
things started to change in the
town. Write down your ideas.
And why you think things
changed.
Blooms Level: Analysis
Mr. Peabody’s Apples
Activity#6
Do you think Tommy
Ticklebottom is a bad person or
a good person? Talk with a
partner about what you come up
with and then write down in no
more than three sentences why
you came to that conclusion.
Blooms Level: Evaluation
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 12
Thursday, November 19
Morning Announcement:
Be Kind: Today we focus on being kind. Being kind ends bullying because if I am being kind my
actions and words are caring and gentle and others feel safe and secure. Being kind means that I am
acting as one who loves others the way the God loves all of us. If I am being kind I am not mocking
anyone, making fun of others, or teasing and taunting the people around me in a cruel way. Do I treat
everyone I meet with kindness? Do my actions and words come from the love in my heart for others?
Listen to the words of the Prophet Isaiah.
Here God gives these words to Isaiah to say to Israel: “Do not fear, for I have redeemed you; I have
called you by name, you are mine. …you are precious in my sight and I love you.” (Is 43 1b, 4a)
God calls each of us by name to be with Him forever, because we are precious in His eyes. Let us ask
God to help us use each other’s names only in kindness.
Please join me in our morning prayer.
Lord help us to be Kind in our daily thoughts, words and acts. Together let us pray the prayer of St.
Francis and ask for help to be kind:
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen
End of the Day Announcement:
Today we focused on being kind. If we are kind, remembered the words of Jesus spoke in John’s gospel, “Love
one another as I have loved you.”
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 13
Thursday Activities for Teachers/Students:
Prepare for this activity ahead of time by marking the word, “you” on a number of polished river rocks with
waterproof, indelible ink. Obtain a large, clear, open, container that can be filled with water for use during the
activity.
Begin the activity by reading the book, Each Kindness, as a group. Note that Each Kindness is a powerfully
emotional story that identifies missed opportunities for friendship, and describes what happens when kind
actions are not chosen in interpersonal interactions. In the story, a new student is mocked and shunned by
classmates who criticize her physical appearance and refuse to play with her at recess. The story points out the
long-lasting and far-reaching effects that result when kindness is not shown to others.
Discuss the story as a group by helping the students identify the feelings experienced by both the victim and
the bullies throughout the story. Be sure to mention what could have been done differently and the feelings
that would have come from the different, kinder, behaviors.
Bring out one of the rocks with the word “you” painted on one side, showing only the unmarked
side to start, and the container of water. Ask the class what they think the rock represents, and
lead them to understand that the rock represents each one of them and their individual
behaviors toward other people. Turn the rock over to reveal the word “you,” for emphasis. Brainstorm with the
class some of the significant and meaningful ways in which they can show kindness toward others.
Ask the class what they think the bowl of water represents. Help them understand the bowl of water could be
their classroom, their playground, their sports team, their after-school club, their family, their community, or
any place where they find themselves in the company of others. Lead a discussion about how the actions of
one person can affect other people.
Gently drop the rock into the water with the word “you” showing, to illustrate the ripple effect the actions of
one person can have. Fuller suggests using a concrete example directly from the class discussion as the rock is
dropped in the water. You can make a statement such as, “In the same way this rock makes ripples when it
goes into the water, when you choose to say good morning to someone you pass in the hallway, the action you
just took toward that one person creates ripples, or waves, of kindness that will reach many, many, other
people that day. The person who heard good morning from you may smile and say good morning to someone
else, and so on.” Talk about how kindness spreads.
Remind students that the rock represents them and the water represents anyone they encounter in their daily
lives. Drop the rock into the water many times with multiple examples for maximum effect, always with an
explanation such as, “You can smile at a person (drop the rock in the water) and the ripples of your kindness
will reach who knows how many people (watch the ripples).” To help students own the experience of realizing
the effects of their kindness, call on a few students to give some examples of acts of kindness they could do
themselves, and let them drop a rock into the water. Discuss the ripples in terms of what others might
experience in response to that one act of kindness.
Print out the following page on labels and give one to each child.
Have students get out a rock and write with marker, or paint a kind message on it. Have them share it with
someone else.
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 15
Friday, November 20
Morning Announcement:
Throughout the week we have said the peace Prayer of St. Francis. This prayer teaches us and gives us
guidelines on how to be the person God wants us to be. St. Francis is an example of living a life of
Love, and being accepting of all of God’s creation, no matter how big or small.
St. Francis is the model of all that we’ve been looking at this week; Peace, Accepting, Noble and
Kindness. So today, as we say the peace prayer of St. Francis, let us ask Jesus to help us be more like
St. Francis of Assisi.
Lord, Make me an instrument of your peace
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen
End of the Day Prayer:
We thank you, O God, for all the blessings you pour out on us through Jesus, your Son. We praise you
for the masterpiece of love that each one of us is in your eyes. Help us to see each other as you see us.
Help us to be peaceful, accepting, noble and kind with one another, so that our school might be a safe
and welcoming place where everyone feels they belong. We make this prayer to you in the name of
Jesus, the Lord. Amen.
Top of page National Anti-Bullying Awareness Week Plan 16
Friday Activities for Teachers/Students
Intro: Read the book, ‘Adventures in Assisi: On the Path with St. Francis’. Discuss as a class what we
can learn from the story
Discuss the first line the Prayer of St. Francis, “Lord, Make me an instrument of your peace”
Brainstorm concrete ways we can be instruments of peace; smiling at someone, etc.
Activity:
Students will make a tambourine (or another instrument of your choice, this site has an extensive list)
on the instrument they will write how they will activity be an instrument of peace.
Tambourine Instructions
Materials:
2 paper plates,
dried beans or rice,
white glue............
..........................................................................
To make:
1. Decorate the bottom side of both plates.
2. Put rice or beans on the plate.
3. Squeeze glue around the edge of the plate.
4. Place the other plate on top rim to rim and let them dry.
End Activity:
Play the song version of the Prayer of Peace (Here on YouTube), have students use their instruments as
they sing along.