Thank you.
In my experience here—I think we've had experiences with children—I agree that we need a definition of cyberbullying if we're going to develop an approach to it. I think that definition has to involve the power of the person who's perpetrating the said bullying. I think that has to be the basis of that.
One of the comments you made is that girls do this more. I think maybe in some aspects, from my experience, it's more exclusion; it's more intimidation. With boys, it can be a bit physical, and that's why I think we're seeing more suicides by girls across the country than boys. Intimidation lasts forever. Exclusion lasts forever. With boys, it can be quicker; it's dealt with and it's done and they can be friends two minutes later. With girls, sometimes it lasts a lot longer, particularly with teenage girls.
I really think that to make a real difference to stop bullying, whether it's on the playground or whether it's cyberbullying, the one thing I've always talked about is having some sort of supervision take place. Would you agree with that statement?