Parents should monitor their children's cyber activities to make sure nothing happens. If the bully is the parents' child, they should remove the computer from the child's room and place it in a public place in the house. They should sit the child down and warn them of the trouble they may get into if it continues and finally they should register for the same accounts their child has signed up for in order to monitor their activity (Cyberbullying Statistics). If the child is a victim, parents should try to divert their child from using the Internet, watch what he does, and if the situation worsens, they should contact the police and allow them to handle the situation (Cyber Bullying Statistics). All schools are required to take online threats seriously, even if it is a joke, a game, or an out-of-control rumor (Willard 14). Eventually schools were created to make students aware of the rules of bullying in school and on the Internet in schools (Willard 92). ). Some school handbooks state that “Students may be disciplined for extracurricular conduct that substantially interferes with normal school operations, and if you contact and harass someone via any social media the person will be disciplined” (HHS Handbook). Most handbooks in schools will have a school code that says, “It will be
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