No Name-Calling Week
You can help reduce bullying in the classroom and on the playground with these activities during No Name-Calling Week.
By Rachel D
The third week of January is designated as No Name-Calling Week. During this week, teachers can have students discuss the impact bullying has on individuals and reflect on how just a few words can affect a person’s well-being.
No Name-Calling Week is a campaign which was inspired by the young adult novel The Misfits by James Howe. The book tells the story of a group of seventh grade students who are taunted because of how they look, their intelligence, and their manner of expressing themselves. Eventually, this group fights back by assembling a No-Name Party to run in their school's student council elections. Their party has as its goal to put an end to name-calling and create a “No Name-Calling Day” at school. Not only do these characters inspire their principal and school, they also end up affecting change in schools across the nation.
The No Name-Calling Week Coalition, who promotes this campaign, strives to educate students about the problems caused by name-calling and bring attention to the ways to eliminate it. There are many ways to incorporate No Name-Calling Week activities in your classroom or school-wide. The following activities can help eliminate name-calling, harassment, and bullying in your classroom.
Anonymous Box
- Why might this student be feeling this way?
- How can we help this student feel better about their situation?
- What can we do better in this classroom/at this school to avoid this problem?
- Can you relate to what this student is feeling?
- How can we encourage students to avoid name-calling throughout the year?
Stop Bullying with Books
- Lucy and the Bully by Claire Alexander
- The Bully Blockers Club by Teresa Bateman
- My Secret Bully by Trudy Ludwig
- King of the Playground by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
- Hands are Not for Hitting by Martine Agassi
- The Ugly Duckling by Jerry Pinkney
- Freckleface Strawberry and the Dodgeball Bull: A Freckleface Strawberry Story by Julianne Moore
No Name-Calling Week Activities:
In this lesson, students address name-calling in their lives as well as the lives of others. They write reflections and read articles that discuss name-calling throughout history. Students have the opportunity to reflect on ways to discourage name calling in their own lives.
In this lesson, students engage in a role-playing activity focused on conflict management. Students identify the proper steps to take when addressing a bully. Students read and discuss a poem about a bully. They can then use problem-solving activities to solve classroom issues.
Conflict Management: Bullying Can Be Stopped
This lesson has students list the characteristics of bullies. Students discuss the importance of involving adults and using the three “Rs” when addressing a bully. They read and discuss various scenarios that involve bullying. By the end of this activity students should have a repertoire of strategies to use when confronted with a difficult situation.