Student play teaches that bullying is not OK
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Danette Goulet
CORONA DEL MAR -- Being a bully is much more than beating someone up
for their lunch money. You can be a bully by saying nothing at all.
That is the message sixth-grade students from Andersen Elementary
School tried to get across to Harbor View Elementary School students
Friday with a play they wrote on the subject.
When the Newport-Mesa Unified School District board passed a revision
to the district’s student conduct policy last month -- adding bullying
and intimidation to the things that would not be tolerated -- the
principal at Andersen, Mary Manos, went to her students for help.
She asked sixth-graders, as the oldest and therefore role models for
the rest of the school, what they could do about the problem.
“One of the little girls came forward and said, ‘We all know when
someone steals your lunch money -- that’s bullying. But it’s the subtle
stuff that really hurts,”’ Manos said.
So the sixth-grade teachers and their students put together a play.
It so inspired Andersen students that they took the show on the road.
They have since performed the musical for their neighboring schools.
“I think it’s really good because it really gets the point across,”
said Kate Gritsch, 11, who plays a fairy who sets a bully straight, one
of the play’s lead roles. “It’s a musical, so it gets a point across in a
way that’s still fun.
“I think it’s a great idea because some people will be in here and you
say [in the play] if you are with someone who is being a bully then you
are bullying,” she added. “You can look around at some kids’ faces and
see that they have. They still look kind of innocent because they didn’t
realize.”
In the play a fairy convinces a bully to change his ways by showing
the bully that what he may have thought was funny really hurt other
children’s feelings.
The play got students at Harbor View thinking.
“It’s good because people will think of it now as bullying and not
think of it as kidding around,” said Kevin Corrigan, 9.
“Sometimes people do it because they’re kidding and they don’t know
how soft the other people’s feeling are,” agreed his classmate Nicholas
Gushue.
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