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Best Practices

Best Practices in Bullying Prevention

There are several best practices that have been found through research to be most effective at reducing bullying in schools. As part of the School Bullying Prevention and Education Grant (BPEG) program, the Colorado Department of Education (CDE) completed a literature review to determine the five core components of the grant program. These five core components are the big buckets of best practices schools can consider when preventing bullying.

You can find more information about the five core components of the BPEG program, including a rubric of key activities for each component, in the BPEG Practice Profiles.

BPEG Practice Profiles (Word)

Bullying Prevention Curriculum

Since the BPEG program began in 2016, grantees have used several different bullying prevention curricula. The CDE does not endorse or recommend any specific curriculum. Rather, each school and district is encouraged to review all of their options and determine what works best given their community. At the beginning of the BPEG program, CDE worked with the University of Nebraska-Lincoln to obtain a review of evidence-based bullying prevention curricula. Below are the evidence-based curricula most commonly used by BPEG program grantees. 

Implementation Science

No matter how many best practices you use, if you’re not implementing them effectively, you won’t reduce bullying. This is where implementation science comes in. Implementation science helps schools and districts bridge the gap between research and the real world. In short, it tells you how to use best practices. 

The BPEG program uses supports provided by the National Implementation Research Network (NIRN) to help schools and districts engage in implementation science. To learn more about implementation science, you can visit NIRN’s website or the Active Implementation Hub.   


If you are a state or federal agency, school district, CSI, or SSRC and have bullying prevention and education best practices you would like for us to review and potentially add to our website, please contact Dr. Adam Collins.