––––––––––––––––––––
Subscribe to the Legal News!
https://legalnews.com/Home/Subscription
Full access to public notices, articles, columns, archives, statistics, calendar and more
Day Pass Only $4.95!
One-County $80/year
Three-County & Full Pass also available
- Posted October 16, 2013
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Anti-bullying seminar hosted by Cooley, Oct. 22
Thomas M. Cooley Law School will host "Working Together to Stop Bullying" on Tuesday, Oct. 22, at Cooley's Auburn Hills campus. The seminar will focus on how to stop bullying and harassment in schools under "Matt's Safe School Law." The law, signed by Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder in December 2011, is named after Matt Epling, high school freshman from East Lansing who killed himself in 2002 after being bullied by upperclassman.
The seminar, hosted by Cooley, is specifically for members of the Metropolitan Detroit Bureau of School Studies, Inc. Members are invited to check in at 8:30 a.m. The seminar runs from 9 a.m. until 12:15 p.m.
Presenters include Saginaw County 70th District Court Judge M.T. Thompson Jr., Cooley Professor Monica Nuckolls, and Dr. and Professor Gwendolyn Thompson McMillon, Oakland University. The seminar will feature discussions with authors of The Weekly Bully Beat Down.
An overview will inform attendees on what "Matt's Safe School Law" means for Michigan school districts. Attendees will also receive resources indicating what administrators, teachers, students and parents can do to stop bullying. These resources will include educational material on how to tell if a child is being bullied, recognize the profile of a bully, recognize the profile of a victim, and detect the warning signs for teen shooters and suicide.
"Making sure schools and parents have access to educational resources is key," said Nuckolls, one of the seminar's organizers. "Educating about the warning signs, prevention tactics, and consequences that can occur will be the first step of educators working together to stop bullying."
To register for this seminar, contact the Metropolitan Detroit Bureau of School Studies at 313-577-1611 or Deborah Berger at daberger@wayne.edu.
Published: Wed, Oct 16, 2013
headlines Oakland County
- Presidents recognized
- Supreme Court justices tell Congress their safety is at risk and more must be spent on security
- As cyclospora illnesses surge to a record, Michigan officials eye lettuce as a possible cause
- ACLU leader and social justice advocate to receive ABA Thurgood Marshall Award
- Health and Housing Summer Fest hosted in Royal Oak
headlines National
- ABA connects death row inmate to pro bono attorneys who help free him
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- 2 judges suspended in separate cases after being indicted on criminal charges
- Convicted ex-judge gets $5K fine but no prison time in immigration case
- Ohio governor signs bill prohibiting foreign litigation funding
- Many small firms collect payments faster than BigLaw counterparts, new data shows




