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Dr. Renee Clauselle Praises White House's Efforts to Address Bullying at a National Level

Written by Hank Russell  |  09. March 2011

Dr. Renee Clauselle, Founder, Child & Family Psychology, says the White House is providing a valuable service for the students, parents and teachers by holding a roundtable discussion at the national level to address the problem of bullying that takes place in the nation's schools. The White House Conference on Bullying Prevention is scheduled to be held on March 10. Students, parents, teachers and community leaders are being invited to the conference, which will be streamed live throughout the day at www.WhiteHouse.gov/live. In addition, visitors to the website can discuss the issue of bullying online with a panel of experts and ask questions through the White House's blog site. The White House also put out a public service announcement via Facebook to raise awareness on bullying and how it can be prevented. The White House's blog site reports that nearly one-third of all school-aged children - approximately 13 million students -are bullied each school year. According to the StopBullying website (www.StopBullying.gov), children who are bullied show signs of anxiety, sadness or depression. They come home with damaged or missing clothing, have trouble sleeping, change their eating habits, lose interest in school work and being with their friends, are afraid to go to school and have injuries that are either unexplained or self-inflicted. Bullies, on the other hand, are very confrontational (verbally and physically), wind up in detention or the principal's office more often, refuse to take responsibility, blame others and associate themselves with other bullies, according to StopBullying.gov. The White House also states that students who bully other students are more likely to have challenges in school, abuse drugs and alcohol and have physical and mental health issues. "I am happy to see that the issue of bullying is finally getting nationwide attention," Dr. Clauselle said. "The President and the First Lady really know how to engage tweens and teenagers by making the summit available on Facebook. In doing so, they are engaging the students. I also support the mission to get parents involved in the discussion. Too many parents still ignore the issue of bullying and think it is 'just what kids do.' Hopefully, many parents, coaches and school personnel will tune in to this informative conference." For more information, visit www.psychologists4kids.com. ### About Dr. Renee Clauselle Dr. Renee Clauselle is a practicing child psychologist and founder of Child and Family Psychology, formerly called Psychologist on Wheels PC. She is also the Director of School Mental Health Services at St. John's University, and has served as an adjunct faculty member at both St. John's University and the Teacher's College at Columbia University. Dr. Clauselle frequently has speaking engagements throughout New York City and Long Island and serves as a Distinguished Faculty Member for Lorman Educational Services, where she has spoken on Autism Spectrum Disorders, Discipline, and Special Education. Child and Family Psychology has locations in Franklin Square and Kings Park, New York. For more information, call (516) 750-4841 or visit www.psychologists4kids.com.

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