Sample lesson plan

What do powerful digital bystanders do? Say  
LevelGrade 9-12
Duration1-2 weeks

Overview

Let’s face it: Some online spaces can be full of negative, rude, or downright mean behavior. But what counts as cyberbullying? Help your students learn what is — and what isn’t — cyberbullying and give them the tools they’ll need to combat the problem.

Learning Objectives:

  • Recognize similarities and differences between in-person bullying, cyberbullying, and being bystander.
  • Identify powerful digital bystanders
  • Empathize with the targets of cyberbullying.
  • Identify strategies for dealing with cyberbullying and ways they can be an upstander for those being bullied.

Key Vocabulary:

Bully – the person who is doing the bullying

Bullying – unwanted and aggressive verbal, social, or physical behavior towards another

Bystander – someone who sees a bullying or cyberbullying situation, but doesn?۪t do anything to stop it

Cyberbullying – using digital devices, sites, and apps to intimidate, harm, and upset someone

Empathy – to imagine the feelings that someone else is experiencing

Target – the person who is on the receiving end of the bullying

upstander – a person who supports and stands up for someone else

What you’ll need

Classroom resources

Take-home resources

Procedure

During the lessons, students are expected to complete and participate in the following activities

  1. Warm up – Is it Cyberbullying: Optional activity – E-volve games in digital passport (Common sense Education), ask questions related what bystander cyberbullying is? and invite students to respond, watch video – About bystander
  2. Expand – who is involved: Talk about target, bully, bystander, Empathy and upstander. Ask students to share their views and invite them to share answers.
  3. Analyze – Sandra’s story: Distribute handout, ask students if this an example a cyberbully and who is bystander in this story. Invite them to share their answers.
  4. Wrap up – Upstander Cards: Distribute blank index cards and markers or colored pencils to students, ask students to create upstander cards. Cards can be for any of the roles in a cyberbullying situation: the target, the bully, or someone who sees it.

Assessments

Ask students to finish the following assessments

  1. Lesson Quiz reflecting bystander knowledge
  2. Family Activity
  3. Family Tips