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CBC news Home World Canada Business Tech Positive Post-it Day held to encourage Airdrie teen's anti-bullying campaign 9 October 2014 | CBC News Community rallies behind Caitlin Prater-Haacke after she's penalized for uplifting posts at school. A southern Alberta city got a little brighter today after hundreds of neon Post-it notes with inspiring hand-written messages started popping up at homes, shops and offices in Airdrie. [...]. The movement was started by a local high school student trying to fight off a bully. Caitlin Prater-Haacke had been sent a message on Facebook telling her to kill herself. "I read the post and honestly I felt like throwing up," said the teen's mother Nicole Haacke. "The words that were used, they're not words i use in my own house." Instead of replying to the message, Prater-Haacke took out a marker and some small pads of paper. She decided to fight back by posting positive messages on every locker in her school. "Little simple messages like, 'You're beautiful' [and] "You shine bright like a diamond," she said. CBC News, 9 October 2014.

Tick the correct answer and justify your choice with a quote from the text.
a) The young girl was the victim of cyberbullying.
b) Caitlin didn't feel hurt by the messages she received.
c) She decided to fight her bullies. Write four positive Post-it notes. Right. Wrong. .Right. Wrong. Right. Wrong.​

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