Tuesday, October 8, 2013 12:47am
CHDS
May 14th, 2012

COE to co-host expert panel after documentary ‘Bully’ at Cine May 16

Writer: Michael Childs, 706/542-5889, mdchilds@uga.edu
Contact: Lee Gaby, 706/715-3381, ext 701, leegaby@schoolrisk.org

Published in CHDS, Dean's Office, Press Releases

In coordination with this week’s screenings of the new documentary film “Bully,” at Ciné, the Public School Risk Institute and the University of Georgia College of Education will present a community panel discussion on Wednesday, May 16 from 7-9 p.m. to help raise awareness of the need to make schools safer for all students.

The panel will follow a 5 p.m. screening of the film and include: Andy Horne, dean of the UGA College of Education; Pamela Orpinas, professor, UGA College of Public Health; Kat Raczynksi, doctoral candidate, UGA College of Education; Robin Shearer, Athens-Clarke County Juvenile Court Judge; John Dayton, co-director of the Education Law Consortium; Ernest Hadaway, deputy superintendent, Clarke County School District; Robbie Hooker, principal, Clarke Central High School; Dawn Meyers, director of school social work, Clarke County School District; and Tara Ford, coordinator of behavior support, Clarke County School District.

Horne is widely known for his research on ways to prevent and deal with bullying and aggressive behavior by males. Orpinas and Raczynski have collaborated with him on that research and have continued his work.

This year, over 13 million American kids will be bullied, making it the most common form of violence young people in the U.S. experience.

The film, directed by Sundance- and Emmy-award winning filmmaker, Lee Hirsch, follows five kids and families over the course of a school year. It confronts bullying’s most tragic outcomes, including the stories of two families who’ve lost children to suicide and a mother who waits to learn the fate of her 14–year-old daughter, incarcerated after bringing a gun on her school bus. With rare access to the Sioux City Community School District, the film also gives an intimate glimpse into school busses, classrooms, cafeterias and even principals’ offices, offering insight into the often-cruel world of children, as teachers, administrators and parents struggle to find answers.

While the stories examine the dire consequences of bullying, they also give testimony to the courage and strength of the victims of bullying and seek to inspire real changes in the way we deal with bullying as parents, teachers, children, and in society as a whole. Through the power of these stories, Bully aims to be a catalyst for change and to turn the tide on an epidemic of violence that has touched every community in the United States—and far beyond.

For more information on the movie and screenings, visit:
www.athenscine.com/intro.php

 

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