Anti-Bullying Guidelines by the Department of Education

On October 26, 2010, the U. S. Department of Education released an excellent letter to schools about the need to take a more comprehensive approach to combating bullying.   In general, schools often view bullying as isolated incidents, rather than perceiving underlying patterns of discrimination based on race, color, national origin, sex, or disability.   The hostile, unsafe environment created by bullying hurts students physically and psychologically; bullying also interferes with students’ learning and achievement.

I commend Russlynn Ali, the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights in the Department of Education, for sending out this helpful letter.  When I was a child, many people thought that kids should just “tough it out” when bullied.  From the age of five, I was a target of bullies during elementary school and high school.  I was shy and did not know how to respond to verbal insults.  The frequent bullying upset me and undermined my self-esteem.   I wish that schools were as alert to harassment of students as they are now. I hope that teachers, principals, professors, coaches, guidance counselors, school social workers and psychologists will read the new guidelines and take strong action to discourage bullies, enhance bullies’ sensitivity to others, train all students to respect one another, and heal victims of bullying.  I am very pleased that a national conference to address bullying will take place in 2011.   All members of our multi-cultural society deserve respect.

How the Moon Regained Her Shape
My fiction picture book about bullying, How the Moon Regained Her Shape, helps kids to understand bullying and to recover their self-esteem after being harassed.

Cover by Ben Hodson & Photo by Wendy Longo photography

Janet Ruth Heller

I am the past president of the Michigan College English Association. I have a Ph.D. in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. I have published four poetry books: Nature's Olympics (Wipf and Stock, 2021), Exodus (WordTech Communications, 2014), Folk Concert: Changing Times (Anaphora Literary Press, 2012) and Traffic Stop (Finishing Line Press, 2011). My scholarly book, Coleridge, Lamb, Hazlitt, and the Reader of Drama, was published in 1990 by the University of Missouri Press. My fiction picture book about bullying for children, How the Moon Regained Her Shape (Arbordale, 2006; 7th edn. 2022), has won four national awards. My play The Cell Phone won fourth place in a national contest and was performed twice at the Fenton Village Players One-Act Play Festival on June 24-25, 2011 in Fenton, Michigan. Triton College produced another play, Pledging, as part of its Tritonysia Play Festival in May 2017. Choeofpleirn Press published Pledging in Rushing Through the Dark (2022).