Types of bullying

This lesson will recap what we mean by stereotyping and bullying.

Types of bullying

This lesson will recap what we mean by stereotyping and bullying.

Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. Definition and examples
  2. Bystander intervention

Content guidance

  • Contains subject matter which individuals may find upsetting.

Supervision

Adult supervision suggested.

Licence

This content is made available by Oak National Academy Limited and its partners and licensed under Oak’s terms & conditions (Collection 1), except where otherwise stated.

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3 Questions

Q1.
Read this definition of bullying - a word is missing - choose the correct word from the options below 'Bullying is ________________ that hurts someone else'
action
Correct answer: behaviour
speech
stupidity
Q2.
A bully wants an audience
False
Correct answer: True
Q3.
Which of these explain how bullying occurs
Physical and emotional
Physical and verbal
Verbal and emotional
Correct answer: Verbal, physical and emotional

4 Questions

Q1.
Which of the following are types of bullying?
Correct answer: All of the above
Emotional Bullying
Physical Bullying
Verbal Bullying
Q2.
Which of these are examples of verbal bullying?
Hitting or kicking someone
Laughing at people behind their back
Posting photographs of the person online
Spreading rumours about someone
Correct answer: Teasing
Q3.
What is a bystander?
Someone who is nowhere near the event when it is happening
Correct answer: Someone who watches what is going on
Q4.
What might happen to bystanders if they don't stop bullying?
Correct answer: All of the above
Bullying may get worse as the bully has an audience
Other people may copy the bully
They may be victims in the future

Lesson appears in

UnitRSHE (PSHE) / Respectful relationships: Stereotypes and bullying

RSHE (PSHE)