Stephanie Davis may refer to: (wikipedia)
I think students learn from their friends and their parents.
The more kids report bullying, the more that is a deterrent. The more young people feel safe, that promotes better learning. It's hard to learn if you don't feel safe.
He's the one who came to pick me up. ... He raped me. He took pictures of me. Then he told me my father was in the hospital and that if I told someone, my father would die.
I went to the doctor, and about an hour later, I was in the trauma center.
When someone asked me to dinner for the first time over text message, I found it more than a little insulting. So I sent him a reply suggesting that he pick up the phone and ask me out properly. I never heard from him again.
I had this nagging in the back of my legs.
This is a way to break the silence. It's one thing to know you've been sexually assaulted, but it's another thing to see it in writing. It may seem like a small thing, but it can truly be a big step.
He slipped his hands around my waist and pulled me against him, tossing the ice cream cone over his shoulder. It landed with a splat on the sidewalk. 'So does that mean I have a varsity girlfriend?'
I have truly moved beyond my victimization. I do not think of myself as a victim. I don't think of myself as a survivor. I think of myself as someone who through forgiveness has healed her soul and body and moved on to help other people.
We find a high prevalence of bullying behaviors in schools, but we're also finding with appropriate training that reporting bullying to the appropriate staff is increasing.