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Rainbow board students invited to wear pink Thursday for ‘Stand Up Against Bullying Day’

‘This small gesture will go a long way in demonstrating our commitment to safe schools’
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Junior Kindergarten student Xiran Yu at MacLeod Public School is ready for Stand Up Against Bullying Day Sept. 17. (Supplied)

Staff and students in Rainbow District School Board schools will wear pink on Thursday, Sept. 17 as Rainbow District School Board marks its 13th “Stand Up Against Bullying Day.”

“This small gesture will go a long way in demonstrating our commitment to safe schools,” says Director of Education Norm Blaseg. “We invite the entire community to join us as we wear pink on Thursday, Sept. 17.

“By nurturing a strong partnership between the school, the home and the community, Rainbow Schools ensure that students receive an education that includes personal, social and citizenship development. We are leaders in learning inspiring success for all students by reaching minds and touching hearts.”

The board says 10 character traits, which are modeled, taught and expected in Rainbow schools, provide the foundation for ongoing character development and the values of the board - honesty, respect, empathy, responsibility, integrity, courtesy, resilience, acceptance, courage and co-operation. 

The many character development programs and activities in Rainbow Schools complement the board’s Code of Conduct, which promotes responsibility, respect, civility and academic excellence in a safe learning and teaching environment, said a press release.

“Stand Up Against Bullying Day” began in Nova Scotia where secondary school students Travis Price and David Shepherd arranged for dozens of their classmates to wear pink shirts in support of another student who had been bullied for wearing pink. The Province of Nova Scotia subsequently declared the second Thursday at the start of every school year to be “Stand Up Against Bullying Day.”

"The actions of these two young men, along with their fellow students who wore pink to school in support of another student, reverberated across Canada and in Rainbow Schools,” said Board Chair Doreen Dewar. Rainbow District School Board’s Parent Involvement Committee championed the cause. 


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