The Bully Project has created a toolkit
with resources to help educators share
the film with students, parents, and faculty.
Check out the free resources below.
Use the award-winning film
BULLY and new resources
to inspire empathy and create
positive change in your school.
About the film.
The Bully Project has created a toolkit
with resources to help educators share
the film with students, parents, and faculty.
Check out the free resources below.
As part of its national movement to
end bullying, The Bully Project
has screened BULLY for hundreds
of thousands of kids and adults.
Find out how to join the movement.
Download free resources.
Film Guide
Excerpts from Facing History and Ourselves' "A Guide to the Film BULLY: Fostering Empathy and Action in Schools"
Special Needs
Tips for educators to help protect
special needs students from bullying
Strategies for Change
A Road Map to Building a Caring and Respectful School Community
Bullying Prevention Resources
A list of helpful websites and online tools
About the film BULLY
Over 13 million American kids will be bullied this year, making it the most common form of violence experienced by young people in the nation. The documentary film BULLY, directed by Sundance and Emmy award-winning filmmaker Lee Hirsch, brings human scale to this startling statistic, offering an intimate, unflinching look at how bullying has touched five kids and their families.
BULLY is a cinematic, character-driven documentary. At its heart are those with huge stakes in this issue whose stories each represent a different facet of America's bullying crisis—from victims who suffer verbal and physical abuse to victims who resort to gun threats and suicide. Filmed over the course of the 2009/2010 school year, BULLY opens a window onto the pained and often endangered lives of bullied kids, revealing a problem that transcends geographic, racial, ethnic, and economic borders. It documents the responses of teachers and administrators to aggressive behaviors that defy “kids will be kids” clichés, and it captures a growing movement among parents and youths to change how bullying is handled in schools, in communities, and in society as a whole.
Parents play a vital role in supporting their kids, promoting upstander rather than bystander behavior, and teaching and modeling empathy in the home.