CYBERBULLYING & 
CYBER SAFETY IN 
STEPHENVILLE 
SCHOOLS 
CYBERBULLYING (NOUN): THE USE 
OF ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION TO BULLY A PERSON, TYPICALLY 
BY SENDING MESSAGES OF AN INTIMIDATING OR THREATENING 
NATURE. 
By AUTUMN OWENS
STUDENTS WILL ENCOUNTER CYBER 
SAFETY ISSUES 
• According to schools.uknowkids.com, 33% of 
all teenagers have been cyberbullied before. 
Locally: 
• 183 students at Stephenville High School will 
experience cyberbullying. 
• Another 269 students will electronically share an 
inappropriate image. 
• And 215 students will experience sexual 
solicitation.
“The cyber 
world is a 
wonderful 
world, but also 
a dangerous 
one.” 
–Renee Goodwin, 
Principal of Henderson 
Junior High
Sgt. Ernest Rivera of the Attorney General’s office 
gave a presentation at Stephenville schools about 
cyber safety on Sept. 25. 
PHOTO BY AUTUMN OWENS
A CYBER SAFETY PRESENTATION FOR 
STUDENTS 
The presentation included: 
 How to detect online predators and what to do in that situation. 
 TMI online- information spreads quickly and can reach people you 
don’t want it to. 
 Using privacy settings on social media sites. 
 Sexting 
 Cyberbullying 
 Inappropriate content- drinking/drug use, hate speech, lewd or 
offensive gestures, revealing or suggestive images and more. 
• “If you would be embarrassed for your parents to see it, then 
don’t post it.” 
-Sgt. Rivera 
**Tips for parents were also available in a brochure**
ONLINE PREDATORS 
• Are mostly male 
• Are honest about being an adult 
• “Are great at grooming you” – Sgt. Rivera 
• Will flatter you 
• Send you gifts 
• Discuss adult subjects 
• Ask you to keep secrets 
• Share or ask for revealing images 
• Blackmail you 
• Tell you they love you more than friends and family 
• “There’s no one in this world who loves you more than your 
parents.” –Sgt. Rivera
Survivor Diaries-Real Teens Talk About 
Internet Predators (video): 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2g0lXpRL20 
65% of males met someone online who asked to meet in person. 
39% of males who had uncomfortable online experiences did not If you or someone you know has been victimized, tell someone. A also be made at www.cybertipline.com.
PHOTO BY AUTUMN OWENS
T.M.I. (TOO MUCH INFORMATION) 
ONLINE: 
• Will reach people you don’t want it to. 
• Will be permanent. 
WHAT YOU CAN DO: 
• Don’t allow people in your life that you don’t know. 
• Delete people you haven’t met before (they won’t know that you 
did). 
• Have a different password for each account. 
• Use privacy settings. 
• Don’t share passwords…EVER. 
• Ask yourself: “who might this hurt?” and “do I like what this 
says about me?”
Cyberbullying- The Amanda Todd Story 
Canadian, Amanda Todd, 
made a Youtube video about 
her experience being 
blackmailed online and 
cyberbullied. After she made 
the video she ended her own 
life; the video went viral. 
April of this year they have 
found the 35-year-old man in 
the Netherlands who had a 
hand in Todd’s suicide. The 
man is involved in other 
cases and was charged with 
extortion, internet luring, 
criminal harassment and 
child pornography. “It is time 
to use the Amanda Todd 
story as a wakeup call for 
children PHOTO FRO eMv: erywhere.” 
WWW.CHRISTIANPOST.COM 
http://youtu.be/vOHXGNx-E7E
“BULLYING SHOULD NEVER HAPPEN.” 
–SGT. RIVERA 
• Cyberbullying- spreading rumors and gossip through text or online. 
• Cyberbullying happens 24/7, it doesn’t end once you leave school. 
• Once you put it online, the whole world can see it. 
WHAT YOU CAN DO: 
• Don’t respond 
• Block that person 
• Save the evidence 
• Setup new accounts 
• Stand up for a victim 
• Don’t encourage 
PHOTO FROM: 
RESOURCES.UKNOWKIDS.COM
2014 Cyberbullying Statistics from 
nobullying.com: 
More than 10,000 youths were surveyed: 
• 7 in 10 young people are victims of cyberbullying. 
• 37% of them are experiencing cyberbullying on a highly frequent basis. 
• 20% of young people are experiencing extreme cyberbullying on a daily basis. 
• 54% of young people using Facebook reported they have experienced cyberbullying. 
• Cyberbullying found to have catastrophic effects upon the self-esteem and social lives 
of up to 70% of young people.
“CYBERBULLYING HAS HAPPENED 
HERE, SEXTING HAS HAPPENED 
HERE; YOU ARE THE ONES THAT CAN 
STOP IT. I ASK THAT YOU DO THAT, 
YOU HAVE RESOURCES AND YOU 
HAVE FRIENDS WHO CAN HELP YOU. 
THIS COULD BE OUR FIRST BULLY-FREE 
CAMPUS.” –RENEE GOODWIN
CITATIONS: 
• Abbott, Greg. “Cyber Safety.” Texas Attorney General. Brochure. 
• Rivera, Ernest. “Cyber Safety.” Henderson Junior High, Stephenville. 25 
Sept. Presentation. 
• “The Amanda Todd Story.” The Movement Against Bullying. 2014 . 
http://nobullying.com/amanda-todd-story/ 
• “Cyberbullying and Bullying Statistics 2014, Finally!” 2014. nobullying.com 
http://nobullying.com/cyberbullying-bullying-statistics-2014-finally/ 
• No Cyber Bullying. Photo. resources.uknowkids.com 
• Swoda.“Are Stephenville High School Students Safe Online?” July 2, 
2013. http://schools.uknowkids.com/internet-safety-at-stephenville-high-school- 
stephenville-tx/

Cyber Safety

  • 1.
    CYBERBULLYING & CYBERSAFETY IN STEPHENVILLE SCHOOLS CYBERBULLYING (NOUN): THE USE OF ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION TO BULLY A PERSON, TYPICALLY BY SENDING MESSAGES OF AN INTIMIDATING OR THREATENING NATURE. By AUTUMN OWENS
  • 2.
    STUDENTS WILL ENCOUNTERCYBER SAFETY ISSUES • According to schools.uknowkids.com, 33% of all teenagers have been cyberbullied before. Locally: • 183 students at Stephenville High School will experience cyberbullying. • Another 269 students will electronically share an inappropriate image. • And 215 students will experience sexual solicitation.
  • 3.
    “The cyber worldis a wonderful world, but also a dangerous one.” –Renee Goodwin, Principal of Henderson Junior High
  • 4.
    Sgt. Ernest Riveraof the Attorney General’s office gave a presentation at Stephenville schools about cyber safety on Sept. 25. PHOTO BY AUTUMN OWENS
  • 5.
    A CYBER SAFETYPRESENTATION FOR STUDENTS The presentation included:  How to detect online predators and what to do in that situation.  TMI online- information spreads quickly and can reach people you don’t want it to.  Using privacy settings on social media sites.  Sexting  Cyberbullying  Inappropriate content- drinking/drug use, hate speech, lewd or offensive gestures, revealing or suggestive images and more. • “If you would be embarrassed for your parents to see it, then don’t post it.” -Sgt. Rivera **Tips for parents were also available in a brochure**
  • 6.
    ONLINE PREDATORS •Are mostly male • Are honest about being an adult • “Are great at grooming you” – Sgt. Rivera • Will flatter you • Send you gifts • Discuss adult subjects • Ask you to keep secrets • Share or ask for revealing images • Blackmail you • Tell you they love you more than friends and family • “There’s no one in this world who loves you more than your parents.” –Sgt. Rivera
  • 7.
    Survivor Diaries-Real TeensTalk About Internet Predators (video): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2g0lXpRL20 65% of males met someone online who asked to meet in person. 39% of males who had uncomfortable online experiences did not If you or someone you know has been victimized, tell someone. A also be made at www.cybertipline.com.
  • 8.
  • 9.
    T.M.I. (TOO MUCHINFORMATION) ONLINE: • Will reach people you don’t want it to. • Will be permanent. WHAT YOU CAN DO: • Don’t allow people in your life that you don’t know. • Delete people you haven’t met before (they won’t know that you did). • Have a different password for each account. • Use privacy settings. • Don’t share passwords…EVER. • Ask yourself: “who might this hurt?” and “do I like what this says about me?”
  • 10.
    Cyberbullying- The AmandaTodd Story Canadian, Amanda Todd, made a Youtube video about her experience being blackmailed online and cyberbullied. After she made the video she ended her own life; the video went viral. April of this year they have found the 35-year-old man in the Netherlands who had a hand in Todd’s suicide. The man is involved in other cases and was charged with extortion, internet luring, criminal harassment and child pornography. “It is time to use the Amanda Todd story as a wakeup call for children PHOTO FRO eMv: erywhere.” WWW.CHRISTIANPOST.COM http://youtu.be/vOHXGNx-E7E
  • 11.
    “BULLYING SHOULD NEVERHAPPEN.” –SGT. RIVERA • Cyberbullying- spreading rumors and gossip through text or online. • Cyberbullying happens 24/7, it doesn’t end once you leave school. • Once you put it online, the whole world can see it. WHAT YOU CAN DO: • Don’t respond • Block that person • Save the evidence • Setup new accounts • Stand up for a victim • Don’t encourage PHOTO FROM: RESOURCES.UKNOWKIDS.COM
  • 12.
    2014 Cyberbullying Statisticsfrom nobullying.com: More than 10,000 youths were surveyed: • 7 in 10 young people are victims of cyberbullying. • 37% of them are experiencing cyberbullying on a highly frequent basis. • 20% of young people are experiencing extreme cyberbullying on a daily basis. • 54% of young people using Facebook reported they have experienced cyberbullying. • Cyberbullying found to have catastrophic effects upon the self-esteem and social lives of up to 70% of young people.
  • 13.
    “CYBERBULLYING HAS HAPPENED HERE, SEXTING HAS HAPPENED HERE; YOU ARE THE ONES THAT CAN STOP IT. I ASK THAT YOU DO THAT, YOU HAVE RESOURCES AND YOU HAVE FRIENDS WHO CAN HELP YOU. THIS COULD BE OUR FIRST BULLY-FREE CAMPUS.” –RENEE GOODWIN
  • 15.
    CITATIONS: • Abbott,Greg. “Cyber Safety.” Texas Attorney General. Brochure. • Rivera, Ernest. “Cyber Safety.” Henderson Junior High, Stephenville. 25 Sept. Presentation. • “The Amanda Todd Story.” The Movement Against Bullying. 2014 . http://nobullying.com/amanda-todd-story/ • “Cyberbullying and Bullying Statistics 2014, Finally!” 2014. nobullying.com http://nobullying.com/cyberbullying-bullying-statistics-2014-finally/ • No Cyber Bullying. Photo. resources.uknowkids.com • Swoda.“Are Stephenville High School Students Safe Online?” July 2, 2013. http://schools.uknowkids.com/internet-safety-at-stephenville-high-school- stephenville-tx/