The A-B-C's of School Violence by Corey Johnson
A teen-ager not yet
old enough to drive may be tried as an adult for allegedly
opening fire
Thursday at Heritage High School in suburban Atlanta and wounding
six classmates. Two
students dead and 13 injured during afternoon shooting at Santana
High School in California.
Horrific shooting at Columbine High School. What type of imagery
does headlines like these
stir?
These are the types of topics that are
bombarding our television stations and news coverage
daily. Why is society so interested in chaos? Researchers have
completed an analysis of 37
school shootings. The research showed that students at school
usually knew what would happen
because the shooters had told them, but the bystanders didn't
warn anyone. This disturbing pattern
gives society a brief ray of hope, because this gives teachers
time to intervene. If kids tell, teachers
or parents might be able to learn what a student is planning
before the violence erupts.
What part does the media play in this
violence? The media has become a tool to broadcast
the violence. The majority of the acts of violence in schools are
re-creations of a previous incident.
Students are seeing acts of violence on television and want to
create them at their school.
The most staggering of all statistics showed
that over 90% of the school violence was caused
by male students.
What can be done to stop this trend? More and
more weapons are showing up in schools
underscores how readily accessible they are. In response to this
phenomenon, schools are
resorting to random checks of students' book bags, backpacks, or
lockers. They are also
increasing their use of metal detectors to identify students
carrying weapons. Many schools are
moving to physical means of control--fences, blocked access
roads, and locked and chained
doors--to guard against violence. Such measures are costly and
reflect the real and unpleasant
image of being locked up. These efforts also divert funds from
efforts to reform education and
restructure schools. Sometimes this is the type of effort
necessary to curve the violence in schools.
Most strategies to curb violence in school and
society are designed to respond to violence
after it has occurred rather than to prevent it. This is the
reason the majority of plans happen as
a result of the incident.
Equally effective, if not more so, and less
costly than guards, is the use of students' parents as
monitors and teachers' aides. Studies show that youth are less
likely to misbehave or engage in
violent acts if parents from their neighborhood are highly
visible on a daily basis in their school.
Several schools have used this strategy and found it to be highly
effective. When parents take a
more personal role in the environment their children live in, the
violence in school has decreased.
Institutionalization of discipline and dress
codes is another strategy used to curb violence. These
codes should be developed collaboratively by administrators,
teachers, parents, and students.
Discipline and dress codes should be reviewed by the school
district's legal staff to assure
compliance with state school law. Equally important, schools must
be sure that the rules created
have a purpose and that they explicitly tell students what kinds
of behavior are acceptable.
Schools should also try to establish
counseling programs for students, and assure that students
do indeed have access to their counselors. Children need someone
other than parents to express
their feelings to. Currently, most elementary schools do not have
counselors, and if they do, they
are in the schools for only one or two days per week. At the high
school level, counselors are
part of the staff. However, the average high school counselor has
between 350-400 students to
advise. This is too many students for the counselor to have a
personal relationship with students.
Needless to say, students are lucky to see their counselor once
during a school year-usually when
it is time to sign up for the next year's classes-and this
contact often occurs in a large group. In
order to effectively counsel the students in the school-whether
academically or behaviorally-and
to ensure that students have access to their assigned counselor
on a regular basis, counselors
should be assigned no more than 125-150 students per school year.
The counselor should have
only one job and this is counseling.
Another form of "counseling" is the
widespread use of conflict resolution strategies to defuse
potentially violent situations and to persuade those involved to
use nonviolent means to resolve
their differences. These types of strategies help to diffuse
escalating problems before they reach a
boiling point. Some schools that have adopted conflict resolution
strategies are trying to teach
young people new ways of channeling their anger into
constructive, nonviolent responses to conflict.
As a means of addressing violence, conflict resolution programs
in schools start by identifying a
core group of student leaders in the school. This group receives
intensive training and supervision
in the use of conflict resolution strategies and student
mediation. Members of the "conflict resolution
team" then use their skills and knowledge to help maintain
order in the school by counseling their
peers, intervening in disputes among students, helping them talk
through their problems, and training
other students to use conflict resolution strategies. Conflict
resolution strategies should be used in
individual classrooms as well as school wide. In addition, high
school team members should visit
students in elementary school and teach them the value of
conflict resolution skills. Thus, conflict
resolution strategies can be used for both prevention and
intervention.
Schools should strongly consider the
establishment of crisis centers for students who commit
violent acts or threaten violence. Teachers and administrators
can refer students to the centers, which
should be staffed by professionals who are specially trained to
work with violent students. Crisis
centers should not be used for long-term interventions, but
rather as in-school areas where students
can be sent to "cool off" and to receive on-the-spot
counseling. Nor should crisis centers be viewed
as a replacement for after school detention programs.
To maintain a safe and orderly classroom
conducive to teaching and learning, a teacher must set
forth both academic and behavioral expectations for all students.
In addition to school wide codes,
each teacher must articulate to students on the first day of
class the basic standards of behavior for
the class. Additional standards may be developed with input from
the students to reinforce their
commitment to the standards.
Although the violence in schools has tripled
in past years, parents need not get discouraged. All
attention in the media may not be harmful. With the large media
coverage now given to school
violence, parents are now aware that there is a problem. With
parents aware of the violence, they
can now speak with their children to make them aware of what's
happening in schools. The best
defense parents can give their children is awareness.
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