From message to meme: DLSU study shows how bullying escalates on social media

By Patricia B. Mirasol听
Online bullying and harassment among Filipino youth has three dimensions, ): it can be aimed not only at individuals but also at groups and ideas; it can be either direct or veiled; and it can escalate from a private chat to a public meme.听听
Preventing and mitigating online bullying necessitates the creation of social collective mechanisms for validation and support, said Jason Vincent A. Caba帽es, a co-investigator of the project and DLSU professor of communication,.听听
鈥淲e cannot put all the responsibility on the young,鈥 Mr. Caba帽es said. 鈥淲e need to create an environment that will help them set healthy boundaries. We need to create schools where the youth will feel recognized, and where they will learn to acknowledge when something [constitutes] bullying. This extends to the home as well 鈥 for parents to not be dismissive and say, 鈥榃eak ka lang [you鈥檙e just weak].鈥欌澨
鈥淭here has to be recognition all around so young people will feel empowered,鈥 he added.听听听
The project team created infographics for both and to know what online bullying and harassment is and how to prevent it. 听
SELF-AWARENESS, SENSITIVITY
Self-awareness, coupled with sensitivity to others, is key to setting healthy boundaries. An created by DLSU shows that bullying takes many forms, including jokes that seem friendly.听听
Victims will not be able to act on bullying incidents if they dismiss their feelings, according to Cheryll Ruth R. Soriano, the project鈥檚 principal investigator and a professor in the department of communication at DLSU. Perpetrators, meanwhile, will not realize they are already inflicting harm.听听
Ms. Soriano added that dismissing experiences because they do not meet traditional definitions (such as being deliberate, repetitive, or directly aggressive) may lead to the neglect of the bullying鈥檚 impact, and the victim鈥檚 capacity to speak about it.听听
鈥淚f they do not recognize [certain acts] as bullying, then that diffuses the responsibility,鈥 Ms. Soriano said, adding that liking a comment in a group chat can be hurtful in some contexts.听听
VIRTUAL SAFE SPACES
Bullying can escalate from one-on-one messaging to free-for-all online platforms because social media is scalable, networked, and persistent, said Mr. Caba帽es. One node connects to others, which can then result in the endless circulation of posts and being 鈥渃anceled.鈥澨
鈥淲e are also entering an era where our relationship to the past is out of our control,鈥 he added. 鈥淭here are many virtually unerasable acts online.鈥澨
Allan B.I. Bernardo, a psychology professor at DLSU, noted that safe spaces are more difficult to create online. 鈥淭here is a world out there that is harsh and mean,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen we talk about empowering people, we also need to help them deal with this harshness. How do we prepare them for this?鈥澨
The two-year research involved interviews with 152 Filipino youth between the ages of 15 and 24 from Metro Manila, Batangas in Luzon, Negros Occidental in Visayas, and Misamis Occidental in Mindanao.听听听


