Since Seon’s 2013 Coloring Contest, “Bullies Aren’t Cool,” received an overwhelming response — over 1,300 submissions from almost 50 school districts — the company has decided to hold the contest annually. This year, the contest will consist of two parts.
For part one, contestants are asked to draw a “No Bullies on My Bus” outline picture on the contest sheet, to be used in part two (contestants will color in the winner’s outline picture). Scan the child’s completed contest sheet and e-mail to marketing@seon.com by Sept. 22. Use the subject line, “Bullies Aren’t Cool.”
The winner’s outline will be used in part two of the contest. The winner will also receive a Seon anti-bullying medal, button, and “Buddy the Seon Safety Bear” stuffed animal.
Part two will begin Oct. 1, in time for National Bullying Prevention Month.
For full instructions on how to enter, and to download the outline drawing sheet to participate, click here.
Seon launches 2014 anti-bullying Coloring Contest
The contest will consist of two parts this year: for part one, contestants are asked to draw a “No Bullies on My Bus” outline picture on the contest sheet, and contestants will color in the winner’s outline picture for part two. The deadline for part one entries is Sept. 22.

Since Seon’s 2013 Coloring Contest received an overwhelming response last year, the company has decided to hold the contest annually. Pictured here are entries from last year's contest.
More Management
All About Cooperative Purchasing: A Guide for School Transportation Pros
Stop bidding everything and try a simpler way. Here's how cooperative purchasing can streamline purchases while maintaining compliance. Sourcewell breaks down the process in this episode of The Route, sponsored by IC Bus.
Read More →
EverDriven Launches New School Bus Routing Services
The alternative transportation company expands its services to traditional yellow buses with the launch of a new division focused on helping school districts optimize their routes.
Read More →
2026 Trailblazer: Joshua Roberts of First Student
Roberts, 35, serves as the lead IT application engineer for vehicle electrification at First Student, where he helps shape scalable, real-world EV infrastructure to support student transportation.
Read More →
2026 Trailblazer: Quavion Swazer of Puyallup School District
Swazer, 29, serves as director of transportation at Puyallup School District, where he champions student wellbeing and inspires the next generation of industry leaders.
Read More →
2026 Trailblazer: Katia Dubas of IMMI
Dubas, 38, serves as sales manager and safety advocate at IMMI, where she advances school bus occupant protection through industry education, OEM collaboration, and proactive safety policy efforts.
Read More →
2026 Trailblazer: Eric Kramlick of TransPar
Kramlick, 30, runs operations for TransPar in Hawaii, where he also showed dedication while helping Maui recover from the recent wildfires.
Read More →
2026 Trailblazer: Jonquez Moore of Little Elm ISD
Moore, 32, grew up around the school bus, leading him to the classroom and eventually inspiring high-performing teams while bringing operations in house (twice).
Read More →
2026 Trailblazer: Joshua Baran of Odyssey Charter School
Baran, 38, serves as transportation supervisor at Odyssey Charter School in Delaware, where he leads daily operations with a focus on safety and professional growth.
Read More →
2026 Trailblazer: Tyler Maybee of Denver Public Schools
Maybee, 36, leads transportation operations for Denver Public Schools, where he is advancing equity, efficiency, and cross-department collaboration to improve student access.
Read More →
2026 Trailblazer: Lexi Higgins of TAT
Higgins, 38, serves as director of industry engagement at TAT (Truckers Against Trafficking), where she equips school transportation professionals with the tools to recognize and report human trafficking.
Read More →
