you're a fucking moron.
teacher sees video of classmates making fun of single person. OMG I DONT KNOW WHO TO PUNISH. I DONT KNOW HOW TO STOP IT. TELLING THEM NOT TO THREATENING SUSPENSION IS NOT GOING TO HELP LOL.
but why? cuz jennyfromdabloc sed so
Stop coming up with moronic examples and false dilemmas. Judge the situation as it comes. Suck a chode.
I was more interested in school policy, not just one isolated case.
Would you say that as a general policy schools should intervene in cases of online bullying? If so, all the situations I posed are quite relevant.
Should we really limit ourselves to "judging the situation as it comes"? Are you really saying that we shouldn't discuss problems that may arise in the future?
Of course even in this case I totally oppose the school getting involved. I oppose it on the usual freedom grounds, though I doubt that will convince you. Of course, your authoritarian approach will as usual fail, and probably make things worse for the victim.
So you punish the student who made the video. What happens then?
Other students can still re-circulate video online. No one can prove who uploaded it, and as I said, it can be hosted overseas so even the courts cannot have it taken down. If anything, this will only draw more attention to the video and worsen the suffering of the victim.
If the bully feels spiteful about being punished (and there is a good chance they will) they can continue to bully the victim through just about any online means other than videos which they actually appear in. They can do this without any fear of further punishment (using the very simple methods I have already outlined).
Others outside the school and outside the country can also "join the fun" and brazenly make more humiliating videos. If a group like 4chan gets onto something like this, as they often do when things like this get media attention, then the victim is really going to learn the meaning of the word bullying.
Punishing the bully in this case is a terrible idea, because the bully holds all the cards in cyberspace. You don't want to turn it into an us and them situation where the bully views the school and the victim as an enemy out to punish him. You want to actually convince the bully that his behavior is wrong, rather than making futile attempts to force him to do the "right thing." If you can't do that, the best thing for the victim will almost certainly be to simply ignore the content and wait for it to blow over.