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37 U. Tol. L. Rev. 51 (2005-2006)
Cyberbullies on Campus

handle is hein.journals/utol37 and id is 63 raw text is: CYBERBULLIES ON CAMPUS
Darby Dickerson *
I. INTRODUCTION
A new challenge facing educators is how to deal with the high-tech
incivility that has crept onto our campuses. Technology has changed the
way students approach learning, and has spawned new forms of rudeness.
Students play computer games, check e-mail, watch DVDs, and participate in
chat rooms during class. They answer ringing cell phones and dare to carry on
conversations mid-lesson.
Dealing with these types of incivilities is difficult enough, but another, more
sinister e-culprit-the cyberbully-has also arrived on law     school campuses.
Cyberbullies exploit technology to control and intimidate others on campus.'
They use web sites, blogs, and IMs2 to malign professors and classmates.3 They
craft e-mails that are offensive, boorish, and cruel. They blast professors and
administrators for grades given and policies passed; and, more often than not,
they mix in hateful attacks on our character, motivations, physical attributes, and
intellectual abilities.4 They disrupt classes, cause tension on campus, and
interfere with our educational mission. We have cyberbullies in our midst, and
we must deal with them.
My goals in this article are to introduce the law school community to the
problem of cyberbullies, and to alert deans, administrators, and professors to the
risks associated with this form of bullying-so that the problem can be
acknowledged and addressed, and so that we may all learn and work in as safe an
environment as possible. Part II will describe common characteristics of bullies
* 02005, Darby Dickerson. All rights reserved. Vice President and Dean, Stetson University
College of Law. I want to extend a special thanks to Professor Peter F. Lake, the Charles A. Dana
Chair and Co-Director of Stetson University College of Law's Center for Excellence in Higher
Education Law and Policy, for his collaboration on many ideas that appear in this article. I also
want thank Professors Daniel B. Weddle and Brooke J. Bowman for reviewing drafts, and Stetson
law librarian Sally G. Waters and Stetson law student Paula Bentley for their exemplary research
assistance.
1. See text accompanying infra note 42.
2. IM is the common abbreviation for instant message or instant messaging.
3. See, e.g., Erin  O'Connor, Beyond Incivility at Seton  Hall, Critical Mass,
http://www.erinoconnor.org/archives/2003/02/beyond incivili.html (Feb. 14, 2003) (recounting an
episode at Seton Hall in which an adjunct professor discovered that her students posted scathing
comments on www.myprofessorsucks.com).
4. E.g., Jennifer Summerville & John C. Fischetti, How to Foil Cyberbullies, CHRON. HIGHER
EDUC., June 24, 2005, available at http://chronicle.com (describing messages sent to professors by
a student enrolled in online college courses).

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