Bystanders are those people who witness an event such as discrimination and bullying. Bystanders have a choice: to stand by and watch; or to stand up and take steps to support the people involved. Supporting students to feel empowered to stand up as bystanders will help create a supportive and inclusive school culture.
Year level
7-10
Duration
60 minutes
Type
In class activity
SEL Competencies
Self-awareness
Social awareness
Relationship skills
Responsible decision-making
Learning intention
Students learn the importance of bystanders taking action in reducing bullying.
Key outcomes
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
identify activities that count as discrimination
understand the role of bystanders
identify actions that bystanders can take to support a person experiencing discrimination or bullying.
Materials needed
A4 paper
Mapped to
Australian Curriculum: Health and Physical Education
Examine the roles of respect, empathy, power and coercion in developing respectful relationships (AC9HP8P04)
Evaluate the influence of respect, empathy, power and coercion on establishing and maintaining respectful relationships (AC9HP10P04)
Australian Curriculum: General Capabilities
Personal and Social Capability:
Self-awareness
Self-management
Social awareness
Social management
Ethical Understanding:
Responding to ethical issues
Critical and Creative Thinking:
Reflecting
NSW PDHPE Syllabus
Investigates effective strategies to promote inclusivity, equality and respectful relationships (PD4-3)
Analyses factors and strategies that enhance inclusivity, equality and respectful relationships (PD5-3)
Victorian Curriculum: Health and Physical Education
Investigate the benefits of relationships and examine their impact on their own and others’ health and wellbeing (VCHPEP127)
Investigate how empathy and ethical decision-making contribute to respectful relationships (VCHPEP146)
Activity 1
Understanding bystanders
15 minutes
Explain to students that there are many situations where they may witness discrimination or bullying. Bystanders have a choice: to stand by, or to take action.
In pairs, ask students to discuss:
What activities count as discrimination (and/or bullying)?
e.g. unfair treatment or comments about topics including gender, disability, race, sexual orientation, religious belief
Where might you see discrimination or bullying?
e.g. in the classroom, school yard, social media
Who is present when discrimination occurs?
ans: the perpetrator/s, the person/people being targeted, and bystanders
Who is a bystander?
ans: anyone who is a witness
How can bystanders help when they witness discrimination?
e.g. explain why the action was wrong, befriend the person being discriminated against
Debrief
Explain to students that bystanders play a key role in stopping discrimination, and that there are many different ways they can help.
Activity 2
Impact understanding: Bystanders
25 minutes
Ask students to think of a recent example of where someone has stood up for and supported someone being bullied. Examples may be from the media, a TV show or movie, popular culture reference or novel.
In pairs, students discuss their examples:
Why did they choose this example?
How did the bystander stand up and take action?
What are the similarities and differences in the examples chosen?
Combine two pairs to form a larger group. Students discuss:
Why is it important for bystanders to intervene when they witness bullying behaviour or discrimination?
e.g. to support the person experiencing the bullying, to make it clear that the actions are not okay
What is something you could do if you witnessed bullying behaviour?
e.g. tell a teacher, support the person experiencing bullying
How do you think the person the bystander supported would have felt, and why?
e.g. supported, because they know they have an ally
Activity 3
Multiply and merge: Supportive bystanders
20 minutes
Hand out the sheets of blank A4 paper. Ask each student to cut or tear it into four slips.
Individually: Each student is to write down four things (one idea per slip) that they could do or say to support someone experiencing bullying or discrimination, either in person or through the use of technology.
In pairs: Each student finds a partner. They share their four ideas with each other and then negotiate to reduce their ideas to the ‘best four’.
In fours: Each pair then joins up with the other pair. Both pairs share their ‘best four’ ideas and negotiate to reduce their combined eight ideas to a new ‘best four’.
Using their ‘final four’, ask students to discuss any obstacles or blockers that might get in their way if they decided to use their suggested strategies in a real-life situation.
As a class, discuss that there are lots of different ways we can help someone, but the best way depends on what we are comfortable with. It's important to make sure we never act in a way that puts us or others in danger or at risk of harm. Prompts for discussion:
Concern for physical safety
Not knowing the person
No one around to support.