|
|
Early Warning,
Timely Response
A Guide to Safe Schools
Table of Contents
Back to Top
Organizations Supporting This Guide
- American Association of School Administrators
- American Counseling Association
- American Federation of Teachers
- American School Counselors Association
- Council of Administrators of Special Education
- Council for Exceptional Children
- Federation of Families for Children's Mental Health
- National Association of Elementary School Principals
- National Association of School Psychologists
- National Association of Secondary School Principals
- National Association of State Boards of Education
- National Education Association
- National Mental Health Association
- National Middle School Association
- National PTA
- National School Boards Association
- National School Public Relations Association
- Police Executive Research Forum
The full text of this public domain publication is
available at the Department's home page at http://www.ed.gov/offices/OSERS/OSEP/earlywrn.html
and in alternate formats upon request. For more information, please
contact us at:
U.S. Department of Education
Special Education and Rehabilitative Services
Room 3131 Mary E. Switzer Building
Washington, D.C. 20202-2524
http://www.ed.gov/offices/OSERS/OSEP/earlywrn.html
Email: David_Summers@ed.gov
Telephone: (202)205-9043
TDD: (202)205-5465
FIRS 1-800-877-8339,
8 a.m. - 8 p.m., ET, M-F
This guide was produced by the Center for Effective Collaboration and Practice of the
American Institutes for Research in collaboration with the National Association of School
Psychologists, under a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Department of Education, Office
of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, Office of Special Education Programs
(grant# H237T60005).
The development of this guide was supported by the Office
of Special Education and Rehabilitation Services, Office of Special Education Programs,
under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Dissemination of the guide
was supported by the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, Safe and Drug-Free
Schools Program.
Dwyer, K., Osher, D., and Warger, C. (1998). Early
warning, timely response: A guide to safe schools. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Education.
August 1998
Back to Top
Letter
Dear Principal and Teachers:
On June 13, after the tragic loss of life and injuries at Thurston High School in
Springfield, Oregon, President Clinton directed the Department of Education and the
Department of Justice to develop an early warning guide to help "adults reach out to
troubled children quickly and effectively." This guide responds to that Presidential
request. It is our sincere hope that this guide will provide you with the practical help
needed to keep every child in your school out of harms way.
Americas schools are among the safest places to be on a day-to-day basis, due to
the strong commitment of educators, parents, and communities to their children.
Nevertheless, last years tragic and sudden acts of violence in our nations
schools remind us that no community can be complacent in its efforts to make its schools
even safer. An effective and safe school is the vital center of every community whether it
is in a large urban area or a small rural community.
Central to this guide are the key insights that keeping children safe is a
community-wide effort and that effective schools create environments where children and
young people truly feel connected. This is why our common goal must be to reconnect with
every child and particularly with those young people who are isolated and troubled.
This guide should be seen as part of an overall effort to make sure that every school
in this nation has a comprehensive violence prevention plan in place. We also caution you
to recognize that over labeling and using this guide to stigmatize children in a cursory
way that leads to over-reaction is harmful. The guidelines in this report are based on
research and the positive experiences of schools around the country where the value and
potential of each and every child is cherished and where good practices have produced, and
continue to produce, successful students and communities.
We are grateful to the many experts, agencies, and associations in education, law
enforcement, juvenile justice, mental health, and other social services that worked
closely with us to make sure that this report is available for the start of school this
fall. We hope that you and your students and staff, as well as parents and the community,
will benefit from this information.
Sincerely,
Richard W. Riley
Secretary
U.S. Department of Education
Janet Reno
Attorney General
U.S. Department of Justice
Back to Top
Executive
Summary
Early Warning,
Timely Response
A Guide to Safe Schools
Although most schools are safe, the violence that occurs
in our neighborhoods and communities has found its way inside the schoolhouse door (Sheley, McGee, & Wright,
1995). However, if we understand what leads to violence and the types of support that
research has shown are effective in preventing violence, we can make our schools safer.
Research-based practices can help school
communities-administrators, teachers, families, students, support staff, and community
members-recognize the warning signs early, so children can get the help they need before
it is too late. This guide presents a brief summary of the research on violence prevention
and intervention and crisis response in schools. It tells school communities:
- What to look for--the early warning signs
that relate to violence and other troubling behaviors.
- What to do--the action steps that school
communities can take to prevent violence and other troubling behaviors, to intervene and
get help for troubled children, and to respond to school violence when it occurs.
Sections in this guide include:
- Section 1: Introduction. All staff,
students, parents, and members of the community must be part of creating a safe school
environment. Schools must have in place approaches for addressing the needs of all
children who have troubling behaviors. This section describes the rationale for the guide
and suggests how it can be used by school communities to develop a plan of action.
- Section 2: Characteristics of a School That Is Safe
and Responsive to All Children. Well functioning schools foster learning, safety,
and socially appropriate behaviors. They have a strong academic focus and support students
in achieving high standards, foster positive relationships between school staff and
students, and promote meaningful parental and community involvement. This section
describes characteristics of schools that support prevention, appropriate intervention,
and effective crisis response.
- Section 3: Early Warning Signs. There are
early warning signs that, when viewed in context, can signal a troubled child. Educators
and parents--and in some cases, students-can use several significant principles to ensure
that the early warning signs are not misinterpreted. This section presents early warning
signs, imminent warning signs, and the principles that ensure these signs will not be
misinterpreted. It concludes with a brief description of using the early warning signs to
shape intervention practices.
- Section 4: Getting Help for Troubled Children.
Effective interventions for improving the behavior of troubled children are well
documented in the research literature. This section presents research- and expert-based
principles that should provide the foundation for all intervention development. It
describes what to do when intervening early with students who are at risk for behavioral
problems, when responding with intensive interventions for individual children, and when
providing a foundation to prevent and reduce violent behavior.
- Section 5: Developing a Prevention and Response
Plan. Effective schools create a violence prevention and response plan and form a
team that can ensure it is implemented. They use approaches and strategies based on
research about what works. This section offers suggestions for developing such plans.
- Section 6: Responding to Crisis. Effective
and safe schools are well prepared for any potential crisis or violent act. This section
describes what to do when intervening during a crisis to ensure safety and when responding
in the aftermath of crisis. The principles that underlie effective crisis response are
included.
- Section 7: Conclusion. This section
summarizes the guide.
- Section 8: Methodology, Contributors, and Research
Support. This guide synthesizes an extensive knowledge base on violence and
violence prevention. This section describes the rigorous development and review process
that was used. It also provides information about the project's Web site.
A final section lists resources that can be contacted for
more information.
The information in this guide is not intended as a
comprehensive prevention, intervention, and response plan--school communities could do everything
recommended and still experience violence. Rather, the intent is to provide school
communities with reliable and practical information about what they can do to be prepared
and to reduce the likelihood of violence.
The full text of this public domain publication is
available at the Department's home page at http://www.ed.gov/offices/OSERS/OSEP/earlywrn.html.
Back to Top
Section
1: Introduction
A Guide to Safe Schools
Most schools are safe. Although fewer than one percent of
all violent deaths of children occur on school grounds-indeed, a child is far more likely
to be killed in the community or at home-no school is immune (Kingery,
Coggeshall, & Alford, 1998).
The violence that occurs in our neighborhoods and
communities has found its way inside the schoolhouse door. And while we can take some
solace in the knowledge that schools are among the safest places for young people, we must
do more. School violence reflects a much broader problem, one that can only be addressed
when everyone--at school, at home, and in the community--works together.
The 1997-1998 school year served as a dramatic wake-up
call to the fact that guns do come to school, and some students will use them to kill. One
after the other, school communities across the country-from Oregon to Virginia, from
Arkansas to Pennsylvania, from Mississippi to Kentucky-have been forced to face the fact
that violence can happen to them. And while these serious incidents trouble us deeply,
they should not prevent us from acting to prevent school violence of any kind.
There is ample documentation that prevention and early
intervention efforts can reduce violence and other troubling behaviors in schools (Elias, 1994). Research-based practices can help
school communities recognize the warning signs early, so children can get the help they
need before it is too late. In fact, research suggests that some of the most promising
prevention and intervention strategies involve the entire educational
community--administrators, teachers, families, students, support staff, and community
members--working together to form positive relationships with all children (Cornell, 1998).
If we understand what leads to violence and the types of
support that research has shown are effective in preventing violence and other troubling
behaviors, we can make our schools safer.
About This Guide
This guide presents a brief summary of the research on
violence prevention and intervention and crisis response in schools (see Section 8 for a
review of methodology and information on how to locate the research). It tells members of
school communities-especially administrators, teachers, staff, families, students, and
community-based professionals:
- What to look for--the early warning signs
that relate to violence and other troubling behaviors.
- What to do--the action steps that school
communities can take to prevent violence and other troubling behaviors, to intervene and
get help for troubled children, and to respond to school violence when it occurs.
The information in each section is not intended as a
comprehensive prevention, intervention, and response system or plan. Indeed, school
violence occurs in a unique context in every school and every situation, making a
one-size-fits-all scheme impossible. Moreover, school communities could do everything
recommended and still experience violence. Rather, this guide is designed to provide
school communities with reliable and practical information about what they can do to be
prepared and to reduce the likelihood of violence.
Creating a safe school requires having in place many
preventive measures for children's mental and emotional problems-as well as a
comprehensive approach to early identification of all warning signs that might lead to
violence toward self or others. The term "violence" as used in this booklet,
refers to a broad range of troubling behaviors and emotions shown by students-including
serious aggression, physical attacks, suicide, dangerous use of drugs, and other dangerous
interpersonal behaviors. However, the early warning signs presented in this document focus
primarily on aggressive and violent behaviors toward others. The guide does not attempt to
address all of the warning signs related to depression and suicide. Nevertheless, some of
the signs of potential violence toward others are also signs of depression and suicidal
risk, which should be addressed through early identification and appropriate
intervention (Poland, 1995).
Using the Guide To Develop a Plan of Action
All staff, students, parents, and members of the community
must be part of creating a safe school environment:
- Everyone has a personal responsibility for
reducing the risk of violence. We must take steps to maintain order, demonstrate mutual
respect and caring for one another, and ensure that children who are troubled get the help
they need.
- Everyone should have an understanding of
the early warning signs that help identify students who may be headed for trouble.
- Everyone should be prepared to respond
appropriately in a crisis situation.
Research and expert-based information offers a wealth of
knowledge about preventing violence in schools. The following sections provide
information-what to look for and what to do-that school communities can use when
developing or enhancing violence prevention and response plans (see Section 5 for more
information about these plans).
We hope that school communities will use this document as
a guide as they begin the prevention and healing process today, at all age and grade
levels, and for all students.
"Violence is a major concern to
parents, students, teachers, and the administration of any school. We have found that our
best plan starts with prevention and awareness. At our middle school, the school
psychologist, in conjunction with the assistant principal, has developed an
anti-intimidation and threat plan. Our school statistics reflect a dramatic decline in
violence from the 1996-97 to the 1997-98 school year. We treat each and every student with
respect. We are finding that they in turn are demonstrating a more respectful
attitude." G. Norma Villar Baker, Principal, Midvale, UT
Section
2: What To Look For
Characteristics of a
School That Is Safe and Responsive to All Children
Well functioning schools foster learning, safety, and
socially appropriate behaviors. They have a strong academic focus and support students in
achieving high standards, foster positive relationships between school staff and students,
and promote meaningful parental and community involvement. Most prevention programs in
effective schools address multiple factors and recognize that safety and order are related
to children's social, emotional, and academic development (Knoff, &
Batsche, 1995).
Effective prevention, intervention, and crisis response
strategies operate best in school communities that:
- Focus on academic achievement. Effective
schools convey the attitude that all children can achieve academically and behave
appropriately, while at the same time appreciating individual differences (Haynes,
Comer, & Hamilton-Lee, 1988). Adequate resources and programs help ensure that
expectations are met. Expectations are communicated clearly, with the understanding that
meeting such expectations is a responsibility of the student, the school, and the home.
Students who do not receive the support they need are less likely to behave in socially
desirable ways.
- Involve families in meaningful ways.
Students whose families are involved in their growth in and outside of school are more
likely to experience school success and less likely to become involved in antisocial
activities (Haynes,
Comer, & Hamilton-Lee, 1988). School communities must make parents feel welcome in
school, address barriers to their participation, and keep families positively engaged in
their children's education. Effective schools also support families in expressing concerns
about their children-and they support families in getting the help they need to address
behaviors that cause concern.
- Develop links to the community. Everyone
must be committed to improving schools. Schools that have close ties to families, support
services, community police, the faith-based community, and the community at large can
benefit from many valuable resources. When these links are weak, the risk of school
violence is heightened and the opportunity to serve children who are at risk for violence
or who may be affected by it is decreased (Takanishi, 1993).
- Emphasize positive relationships among students and
staff. Research shows that a positive relationship with an adult who is available
to provide support when needed is one of the most critical factors in preventing student
violence (Asher & Coie).
Students often look to adults in the school community for guidance, support, and
direction. Some children need help overcoming feelings of isolation and support in
developing connections to others. Effective schools make sure that opportunities exist for
adults to spend quality, personal time with children. Effective schools also foster
positive student interpersonal relations--they encourage students to help each other and
to feel comfortable assisting others in getting help when needed.
- Discuss safety issues openly. Children
come to school with many different perceptions--and misconceptions--about death, violence,
and the use of weapons. Schools can reduce the risk of violence by teaching children about
the dangers of firearms, as well as appropriate strategies for dealing with feelings,
expressing anger in appropriate ways, and resolving conflicts (Bodine,
Crawford, & Schrumpf, 1995; Cornell, 1998; Poland, 1994). Schools also should
teach children that they are responsible for their actions and that the choices they make
have consequences for which they will be held accountable.
- Treat students with equal respect. A major
source of conflict in many schools is the perceived or real problem of bias and unfair
treatment of students because of ethnicity, gender, race, social class, religion,
disability, nationality, sexual orientation, physical appearance, or some other
factor--both by staff and by peers (Benson, 1996). Students who have
been treated unfairly may become scapegoats and/or targets of violence. In some cases,
victims may react in aggressive ways (Batsche &
Knoff, 1994). Effective schools communicate to students and the greater community that
all children are valued and respected. There is a deliberate and systematic effort-for
example, displaying children's artwork, posting academic work prominently throughout the
building, respecting students' diversity-to establish a climate that demonstrates care and
a sense of community.
- Create ways for students to share their concerns. It
has been found that peers often are the most likely group to know in advance about
potential school violence (Greenbaum,
1988; Hamilton
Fish National Institute on School & Community Violence, 1988). Schools must
create ways for students to safely report such troubling behaviors that may lead to
dangerous situations. And students who report potential school violence must be protected.
It is important for schools to support and foster positive relationships between students
and adults so students will feel safe providing information about a potentially dangerous
situation.
- Help children feel safe expressing their feelings.
It is very important that children feel safe when expressing their needs, fears, and
anxieties to school staff. When they do not have access to caring adults, feelings of
isolation, rejection, and disappointment are more likely to occur, increasing the
probability of acting-out behaviors.
- Have in place a system for referring children who
are suspected of being abused or neglected. The referral system must be
appropriate and reflect federal and state guidelines.
- Offer extended day programs for children.
School-based before- and after-school programs can be effective in reducing violence (Alter, 1998). Effective programs are
well supervised and provide children with support and a range of options, such as
counseling, tutoring, mentoring, cultural arts, community service, clubs, access to
computers, and help with homework.
- Promote good citizenship and character. In
addition to their academic mission, schools must help students become good citizens.
First, schools stand for the civic values set forth in our Constitution and Bill of Rights
(patriotism; freedom of religion, speech, and press; equal protection/nondiscrimination;
and due process/fairness). Schools also reinforce and promote the shared values of their
local communities, such as honesty, kindness, responsibility, and respect for others.
Schools should acknowledge that parents are the primary moral educators of their children
and work in partnership with them.
- Identify problems and assess progress toward
solutions. Schools must openly and objectively examine circumstances that are
potentially dangerous for students and staff and situations where members of the school
community feel threatened or intimidated. Safe schools continually assess progress by
identifying problems and collecting information regarding progress toward solutions (American
Psychological Association [APA], 1993). Moreover, effective schools share this
information with students, families, and the community at large.
- Support students in making the transition to adult
life and the workplace. Youth need assistance in planning their future and in
developing skills that will result in success. For example, schools can provide students
with community service opportunities, work-study programs, and apprenticeships that help
connect them to caring adults in the community. These relationships, when established
early, foster in youth a sense of hope and security for the future.
Research has demonstrated repeatedly that school
communities can do a great deal to prevent violence. Having in place a safe and responsive
foundation helps all children-and it enables school communities to provide more efficient
and effective services to students who need more support. The next step is to learn the
early warning signs of a child who is troubled, so that effective interventions can be
provided.
"I just recently got out of the hospital. I was a
victim of a shooting at my school. I've been teaching for 20 years and I never thought it
could happen at my school. Some of the kids knew about it before it happened, but they
didn't want to say anything-they have a code of honor and they did not want to tattle
tale. But someone has to stand up, someone has to take a stand because, if you don't, then
somebody else is going to get hurt." Gregory Carter, Teacher, Richmond,
VA
"We must avoid fragmentation in implementing
programs. The concepts in preventing and responding to violence must be integrated into
effective school reform, including socially and academically supportive instruction and
caring, a welcoming atmosphere, and providing good options for recreation and
enrichment." Howard Adelman, Professor of Psychology, University of
California, Los Angeles
Section
3: What To Look For
Early Warning Signs
Why didn't we see it coming? In the wake of violence, we
ask this question not so much to place blame, but to understand better what we can do to
prevent such an occurrence from ever happening again. We review over and over in our minds
the days leading up to the incident--did the child say or do anything that would have cued
us in to the impending crisis? Did we miss an opportunity to help?
There are early warning signs in most cases of violence to
self and others--certain behavioral and emotional signs that, when viewed in context, can
signal a troubled child (American
Psychiatric Association, 1994). But early warning signs are just that-indicators that
a student may need help.
Such signs may or may not indicate a serious problem--they
do not necessarily mean that a child is prone to violence toward self or others (American
Psychiatric Association, 1994). Rather, early warning signs provide us with the
impetus to check out our concerns and address the child's needs. Early warning signs allow
us to act responsibly by getting help for the child before problems escalate.
Early warning signs can help frame concern for a child.
However, it is important to avoid inappropriately labeling or stigmatizing individual
students because they appear to fit a specific profile or set of early warning indicators.
It's okay to be worried about a child, but it's not okay to overreact and jump to
conclusions.
Teachers and administrators--and other school support
staff--are not professionally trained to analyze children's feelings and motives. But they
are on the front line when it comes to observing troublesome behavior and making referrals
to appropriate professionals, such as school psychologists, social workers, counselors,
and nurses. They also play a significant role in responding to diagnostic information
provided by specialists. Thus, it is no surprise that effective schools take special care
in training the entire school community to understand and identify early warning signs.
When staff members seek help for a troubled child, when
friends report worries about a peer or friend, when parents raise concerns about their
child's thoughts or habits, children can get the help they need. By actively sharing
information, a school community can provide quick, effective responses.
Principles for Identifying the Early Warning Signs of School
Violence
Educators and families can increase their ability to
recognize early warning signs by establishing close, caring, and supportive relationships
with children and youth--getting to know them well enough to be aware of their needs,
feelings, attitudes, and behavior patterns. Educators and parents together can review
school records for patterns of behavior or sudden changes in behavior.
Unfortunately, there is a real danger that early
warning signs will be misinterpreted. Educators and parents--and in some cases,
students--can ensure that the early warning signs are not misinterpreted by using several
significant principles to better understand them. These principles include:
- Do no harm. There are certain risks
associated with using early warning signs to identify children who are troubled. First and
foremost, the intent should be to get help for a child early. The early warning signs
should not to be used as rationale to exclude, isolate, or punish a child. Nor should they
be used as a checklist for formally identifying, mislabeling, or stereotyping children.
Formal disability identification under federal law requires individualized evaluation by
qualified professionals. In addition, all referrals to outside agencies based on the early
warning signs must be kept confidential and must be done with parental consent (except
referrals for suspected child abuse or neglect).
- Understand violence and aggression within a
context. Violence is contextual. Violent and aggressive behavior as an expression
of emotion may have many antecedent factors-factors that exist within the school, the
home, and the larger social environment. In fact, for those children who are at risk for
aggression and violence, certain environments or situations can set it off (Rutherford
& Nelson, 1995; Mayer,
1995). Some children may act out if stress becomes too great, if they lack positive
coping skills, and if they have learned to react with aggression.
- Avoid stereotypes. Stereotypes can
interfere with--and even harm--the school community's ability to identify and help
children. It is important to be aware of false cues--including race, socio-economic
status, cognitive or academic ability, or physical appearance. In fact, such stereotypes
can unfairly harm children, especially when the school community acts upon them.
- View warning signs within a developmental context. Children
and youth at different levels of development have varying social and emotional
capabilities. They may express their needs differently in elementary, middle, and high
school. The point is to know what is developmentally typical behavior, so that behaviors
are not misinterpreted.
- Understand that children typically exhibit multiple
warning signs. It is common for children who are troubled to exhibit multiple
signs. Research confirms that most children who are troubled and at risk for aggression
exhibit more than one warning sign, repeatedly, and with increasing intensity over time (Gottfredson,
Sealock, & Koper, 1996; Walker,
Colvin, & Ramsey, 1995). Thus, it is important not to overreact to single signs,
words, or actions.
Early Warning
Signs
It is not always possible to predict behavior that will
lead to violence. However, educators and parents--and sometimes students--can recognize
certain early warning signs. In some situations and for some youth, different combinations
of events, behaviors, and emotions may lead to aggressive rage or violent behavior toward
self or others. A good rule of thumb is to assume that these warning signs, especially
when they are presented in combination, indicate a need for further analysis to determine
an appropriate intervention.
We know from research that most children who become
violent toward self or others feel rejected and psychologically victimized (Guerra,
Huesmann, Tolan, Van Acker, & Eron, 1995). In most cases, children exhibit
aggressive behavior early in life and, if not provided support, will continue a
progressive developmental pattern toward severe aggression or violence (Walker,
Colvin, & Ramsey, 1995; Walker,
Stieber, & O'Neill, 1990). However, research also shows that when children have a
positive, meaningful connection to an adult--whether it be at home, in school, or in the
community--the potential for violence is reduced significantly.
None of these signs alone is sufficient for predicting
aggression and violence. Moreover, it is inappropriate--and potentially harmful--to use
the early warning signs as a checklist against which to match individual children. Rather,
the early warning signs are offered only as an aid in identifying and referring children
who may need help. School communities must ensure that staff and students only use the
early warning signs for identification and referral purposes-only trained professionals
should make diagnoses in consultation with the child's parents or guardian.
The following early warning signs are presented with the
following qualifications: They are not equally significant and they are not presented in
order of seriousness. The early warning signs include:
- Social withdrawal. In some
situations, gradual and eventually complete withdrawal from social contacts can be an
important indicator of a troubled child (Skiba, 1997; McConaughy
& Skiba, 1993). The withdrawal often stems from feelings of depression, rejection,
persecution, unworthiness, and lack of confidence.
- Excessive feelings of isolation and being
alone. Research has shown that the majority of children who are isolated and
appear to be friendless are not violent. In fact, these feelings are sometimes
characteristic of children and youth who may be troubled, withdrawn, or have internal
issues that hinder development of social affiliations. However, research also has shown
that in some cases feelings of isolation and not having friends are associated with
children who behave aggressively and violently.
- Excessive feelings of rejection.
In the process of growing up, and in the course of adolescent development, many young
people experience emotionally painful rejection. Children who are troubled often are
isolated from their mentally healthy peers. Their responses to rejection will depend on
many background factors. Without support, they may be at risk of expressing their
emotional distress in negative ways-including violence (Coie,
Dodge, & Kupersmidt, 1990). Some aggressive children who are rejected by
non-aggressive peers seek out aggressive friends who, in turn, reinforce their violent
tendencies.
- Being a victim of violence.
Children who are victims of violence-including physical or sexual abuse-in the community,
at school, or at home are sometimes at risk themselves of becoming violent toward
themselves or others.
- Feelings of being picked on and persecuted.
The youth who feels constantly picked on, teased, bullied, singled out for ridicule, and
humiliated at home or at school may initially withdraw socially. If not given adequate
support in addressing these feelings, some children may vent them in inappropriate
ways-including possible aggression or violence (Greenbaum, 1988; Floyd, 1985).
- Low school interest and poor academic
performance. Poor school achievement can be the result of many factors. It
is important to consider whether there is a drastic change in performance and/or poor
performance becomes a chronic condition that limits the child's capacity to learn. In some
situations--such as when the low achiever feels frustrated, unworthy, chastised,
and denigrated--acting out and aggressive behaviors may occur (Strain,
Guralnick, & Walker). It is important to assess the emotional and cognitive
reasons for the academic performance change to determine the true nature of the problem.
- Expression of violence in writings and
drawings. Children and youth often express their thoughts, feelings,
desires, and intentions in their drawings and in stories, poetry, and other written
expressive forms. Many children produce work about violent themes that for the most part
is harmless when taken in context. However, an overrepresentation of violence in writings
and drawings that is directed at specific individuals (family members, peers, other
adults) consistently over time, may signal emotional problems and the potential for
violence (Berman &
Jobes, 1991). Because there is a real danger in misdiagnosing such a sign, it is
important to seek the guidance of a qualified professional--such as a school psychologist,
counselor, or other mental health specialist--to determine its meaning.
- Uncontrolled anger. Everyone gets
angry; anger is a natural emotion. However, anger that is expressed frequently and
intensely in response to minor irritants may signal potential violent behavior toward self
or others (Walker,
et al., 1995).
- Patterns of impulsive and chronic hitting,
intimidating, and bullying behaviors. Children often engage in acts of
shoving and mild aggression. However, some mildly aggressive behaviors such as constant
hitting and bullying of others that occur early in children's lives, if left unattended,
might later escalate into more serious behaviors (Batsche
& Knoff, 1994; Slaby
& Guerra, 1988).
- History of discipline problems.
Chronic behavior and disciplinary problems both in school and at home may suggest that
underlying emotional needs are not being met. These unmet needs may be manifested in
acting out and aggressive behaviors. These problems may set the stage for the child to
violate norms and rules, defy authority, disengage from school, and engage in aggressive
behaviors with other children and adults.
- Past history of violent and aggressive
behavior. Unless provided with support and counseling, a youth who has a
history of aggressive or violent behavior is likely to repeat those behaviors (Elliot,
Huizinga, & Moise, 1986). Aggressive and violent acts may be directed toward other
individuals, be expressed in cruelty to animals, or include fire setting. Youth who show
an early pattern of antisocial behavior frequently and across multiple settings are
particularly at risk for future aggressive and antisocial behavior (Walker,
et al., 1990; Walker,
Stieber, Ramsey, & O'Neill, 1990; Walker,
Stieber, Ramsey, O'Neill, & Eisert, 1994; Walker
& Sylwester, 1991). Similarly, youth who engage in overt behaviors such as
bullying, generalized aggression and defiance, and covert behaviors such as stealing,
vandalism, lying, cheating, and fire setting also are at risk for more serious aggressive
behavior (Walker,
et al., 1990; Walker,
Ramsey, et.al., 1990; Walker,
et al., 1994; Walker
& Sylwester, 1991). Research suggests that age of onset may be a key factor in
interpreting early warning signs. For example, children who engage in aggression and drug
abuse at an early age (before age 12) are more likely to show violence later on than are
children who begin such behavior at an older age (Walker,
et al., 1990; Walker,
Ramsey, et al., 1990; Walker,
et al., 1994; Walker
& Sylwester, 1991). In the presence of such signs it is important to review the
child's history with behavioral experts and seek parents' observations and insights.
- Intolerance for differences and prejudicial
attitudes. All children have likes and dislikes. However, an intense
prejudice toward others based on racial, ethnic, religious, language, gender, sexual
orientation, ability, and physical appearance--when coupled with other factors--may lead
to violent assaults against those who are perceived to be different (Prothrew-Stith,
1987). Membership in hate groups or the willingness to victimize individuals with
disabilities or health problems also should be treated as early warning signs.
- Drug use and alcohol use. Apart
from being unhealthy behaviors, drug use and alcohol use reduces self-control and exposes
children and youth to violence, either as perpetrators, as victims, or both (Cook, 1991).
- Affiliation with gangs. Gangs
that support anti-social values and behaviors--including extortion, intimidation, and acts
of violence toward other students--cause fear and stress among other students. Youth who
are influenced by these groups--those who emulate and copy their behavior, as well as
those who become affiliated with them--may adopt these values and act in violent or
aggressive ways in certain situations (Snyder,
Sickmund, & Poe-Yamogata, 1996; National
School Safety Center, 1990; Arthur
& Erickson, 1992). Gang-related violence and turf battles are common occurrences
tied to the use of drugs that often result in injury and/or death.
- Inappropriate access to, possession of, and use
of firearms. Children and youth who inappropriately possess or have access
to firearms can have an increased risk for violence (APA,
1993). Research shows that such youngsters also have a higher probability of becoming
victims (Poland, 1993;
National
School Safety Center, 19XX). Families can reduce inappropriate access and use by
restricting, monitoring, and supervising children's access to firearms and other weapons.
Children who have a history of aggression, impulsiveness, or other emotional problems
should not have access to firearms and other weapons.
- Serious threats of violence. Idle
threats are a common response to frustration. Alternatively, one of the most reliable
indicators that a youth is likely to commit a dangerous act toward self or others is a
detailed and specific threat to use violence (Keller & Tapasak, 1997;
Loeber, 1990). Recent incidents across the
country clearly indicate that threats to commit violence against oneself or others should
be taken very seriously. Steps must be taken to understand the nature of these threats and
to prevent them from being carried out.
Identifying and Responding to Imminent Warning Signs
Unlike early warning signs, imminent warning signs
indicate that a student is very close to behaving in a way that is potentially dangerous
to self and/or to others. Imminent warning signs require an immediate response.
No single warning sign can predict that a dangerous act
will occur. Rather, imminent warning signs usually are presented as a sequence of overt,
serious, hostile behaviors or threats directed at peers, staff, or other individuals.
Usually, imminent warning signs are evident to more than one staff member--as well as to
the child's family.
Imminent warning signs may include:
When warning signs indicate that danger is imminent,
safety must always be the first and foremost consideration. Action must
be taken immediately. Immediate intervention by school authorities and possibly law
enforcement officers is needed when a child:
- Has presented a detailed plan (time, place, method) to harm
or kill others-particularly if the child has a history of aggression or has attempted to
carry out threats in the past.
- Is carrying a weapon, particularly a firearm, and has
threatened to use it.
In situations where students present other threatening
behaviors, parents should be informed of the concerns immediately. School
communities also have the responsibility to seek assistance from appropriate agencies,
such as child and family services and community mental health. These responses should
reflect school board policies and be consistent with the violence prevention and response
plan (for more information see Section 5).
Using
the Early Warning Signs To Shape Intervention Practices
An early warning sign is not a predictor that a child or
youth will commit a violent act toward self or others. Effective schools recognize the
potential in every child to overcome difficult experiences and to control negative
emotions. Adults in these school communities use their knowledge of early warning signs to
address problems before they escalate into violence.
Effective school communities support staff, students, and families in understanding the
early warning signs. Support strategies include having:
- School board policies in place that support training and
ongoing consultation. The entire school community knows how to identify early warning
signs, and understands the principles that support them (Dwyer, 1996).
- School leaders who encourage others to raise concerns about
observed early warning signs and to report all observations of imminent warning signs
immediately (Dwyer,
1996). This is in addition to school district policies that sanction and promote the
identification of early warning signs.
- Easy access to a team of specialists trained in evaluating
and addressing serious behavioral and academic concerns (Comer
& Woodruff, in press).
Each school community should develop a procedure that
students and staff can follow when reporting their concerns about a child who exhibits
early warning signs. For example, in many schools the principal is the first point of
contact. In cases that do not pose imminent danger, the principal contacts a school
psychologist or other qualified professional, who takes responsibility for addressing the
concern immediately. If the concern is determined to be serious--but not to pose a threat
of imminent danger--the child's family should be contacted. The family should be consulted
before implementing any interventions with the child. In cases where school-based
contextual factors are determined to be causing or exacerbating the child's troubling
behavior, the school should act quickly to modify them.
It is often difficult to acknowledge that a child is
troubled. Everyone--including administrators, families, teachers, school staff, students,
and community members--may find it too troubling sometimes to admit that a child close to
them needs help. When faced with resistance or denial, school communities must persist to
ensure that children get the help they need.
Understanding early and imminent warning signs is an
essential step in ensuring a safe school. The next step involves supporting the emotional
and behavioral adjustment of children.
Use the Signs Responsibly
It is important to avoid inappropriately
labeling or stigmatizing individual students because they appear to fit a specific profile
or set of early warning indicators. It's okay to be worried about a child, but it's not
okay to overreact and jump to conclusions.
"When doing consultation with school staff and
families, we advise them to think of the early warning signs within a context. We
encourage them to look for combinations of warning signs that might tell us the student's
behavior is changing and becoming more problematic." Deborah Crockett,
School Psychologist, Atlanta, GA
Use the Signs Responsibly
None of these signs alone is sufficient for predicting
aggression and violence. Moreover, it is inappropriate--and potentially harmful--to use
the early warning signs as a checklist against which to match individual children.
Know the Law
The Gun Free Schools Act
requires that each state receiving federal funds under the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act (ESEA) must have put in effect, by October 1995, a
state law requiring local educational agencies to expel from school for a period of not
less than one year a student who is determined to have brought a firearm to school.
Each state's law also must allow the chief administering
officer of the local educational agency to modify the expulsion requirement on a
case-by-case basis. All local educational agencies receiving ESEA funds must have a policy
that requires the referral of any student who brings a firearm to school to the criminal
justice or juvenile justice system.
"Being proactive and having the ability to
consult and meet with my school psychologist on an ongoing basis has helped create a
positive school environment in terms of resolving student issues prior to their reaching a
crisis level." J. Randy Alton, Teacher, Bethesda, MD
Section
4: What To Do
Intervention: Getting
Help for Troubled Children
Prevention approaches have proved effective in enabling
school communities to decrease the frequency and intensity of behavior problems (Hunter &
Elias, 1998). However, prevention programs alone cannot eliminate the problems of all
students. Some 5 to 10 percent of students will need more intensive interventions to
decrease their high-risk behaviors, although the percentage can vary among schools and
communities (Sugai
& Horner, in press).
What happens when we recognize early warning signs in a
child?
The message is clear: It's okay to be concerned when you
notice warning signs in a child-and it's even more appropriate to do something about those
concerns. School communities that encourage staff, families, and students to raise
concerns about observed warning signs--and that have in place a process for getting help
to troubled children once they are identified--are more likely to have effective schools
with reduced disruption, bullying, fighting, and other forms of aggression.
Principles
Underlying Intervention
Violence prevention and response plans should consider
both prevention and intervention. Plans also should provide all staff with easy access to
a team of specialists trained in evaluating serious behavioral and academic concerns.
Eligible students should have access to special education services, and classroom teachers
should be able to consult school psychologists, other mental health specialists,
counselors, reading specialists, and special educators.
Effective practices for improving the behavior of troubled
children are well documented in the research literature. Research has shown that effective
interventions are culturally appropriate, family-supported, individualized, coordinated,
and monitored (Fradd,
Weissmantel, Corria, & Algozzine, 1990). Further, interventions are more effective
when they are designed and implemented consistently over time with input from the child,
the family, and appropriate professionals (Martin & Waltman
Greenwood, 1995; Goldstein
& Conoley, 1997; Vickers
& Minke, 1997). Schools also can draw upon the resources of their community to
strengthen and enhance intervention planning.
When drafting a violence prevention and response plan, it
is helpful to consider certain principles that research or expert-based experience show
have a significant impact on success. The principles include:
- Share responsibility by establishing a partnership
with the child, school, home, and community. Coordinated service systems should
be available for children who are at risk for violent behavior. Effective schools reach
out to include families and the entire community in the education of children (Drug Statistics, 1998).
In addition, effective schools coordinate and collaborate with child and family service
agencies, law enforcement and juvenile justice systems, mental health agencies,
businesses, faith and ethnic leaders, and other community agencies.
- Inform parents and listen to them when early
warning signs are observed. Parents should be involved as soon as possible.
Effective and safe schools make persistent efforts to involve parents by: informing them
routinely about school discipline policies, procedures, and rules, and about their
children's behavior (both good and bad); involving them in making decisions concerning
schoolwide disciplinary policies and procedures; and encouraging them to participate in
prevention programs, intervention programs, and crisis planning. Parents need to know what
school-based interventions are being used with their children and how they can support
their success.
- Maintain confidentiality and parents' rights to
privacy. Parental involvement and consent is required before personally
identifiable information is shared with other agencies, except in the case of emergencies
or suspicion of abuse. The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), a
federal law that addresses the privacy of education records, must be observed in all
referrals to or sharing of information with other community agencies. Furthermore,
parent-approved interagency communication must be kept confidential. FERPA does not
prevent disclosure of personally identifiable information to appropriate parties--such as
law enforcement officials, trained medical personnel, and other emergency personnel--when
responsible personnel determine there is an acute emergency (imminent danger).
- Develop the capacity of staff, students, and
families to intervene. Many school staff members are afraid of saying or doing
the wrong thing when faced with a potentially violent student. Effective schools provide
the entire school community--teachers, students, parents, support staff--with training and
support in responding to imminent warning signs, preventing violence, and intervening
safely and effectively. Interventions must be monitored by professionals who are competent
in the approach. According to researchers, programs do not succeed without the ongoing
support of administrators, parents, and community leaders (Gottfredson, 1997).
- Support students in being responsible for their
actions. Effective school communities encourage students to see themselves as
responsible for their actions, and actively engage them in planning, implementing, and
evaluating violence prevention initiatives (Felner &
Adan, 1988; Gottfredson,
1987).
- Simplify staff requests for urgent assistance. Many
school systems and community agencies have complex legalistic referral systems with
timelines and waiting lists. Children who are at risk of endangering themselves or others
cannot be placed on waiting lists.
- Make interventions available as early as possible.
Too frequently, interventions are not made available until the student becomes violent or
is adjudicated as a youthful offender. Interventions for children who have reached this
stage are both costly, restrictive, and relatively inefficient. Effective schools build
mechanisms into their intervention processes to ensure that referrals are addressed
promptly, and that feedback is provided to the referring individual.
- Use sustained, multiple, coordinated interventions.
It is rare that children are violent or disruptive only in school. Thus, interventions
that are most successful are comprehensive, sustained, and properly implemented. They help
families and staff work together to help the child. Coordinated efforts draw resources
from community agencies that are respectful of and responsive to the needs of families.
Isolated, inconsistent, short-term, and fragmented interventions will not be
successful-and may actually do harm.
- Analyze the contexts in which violent behavior
occurs. School communities can enhance their effectiveness by conducting a
functional analysis of the factors that set off violence and problem behaviors. In
determining an appropriate course of action, consider the child's age, cultural
background, and family experiences and values. Decisions about interventions should be
measured against a standard of reasonableness to ensure the likelihood that they will be
implemented effectively.
- Build upon and coordinate internal school
resources. In developing and implementing violence prevention and response plans,
effective schools draw upon the resources of various school-based programs and staff--such
as special education, safe and drug free school programs, pupil services, and Title I.
Violent behavior is a problem for everyone. It is a normal
response to become angry or even frightened in the presence of a violent child. But, it is
essential that these emotional reactions be controlled. The goal must always be to ensure
safety and seek help for the child.
Intervening Early with Students Who Are at Risk for Behavioral
Problems
The incidence of violent acts against students or staff is
low. However, pre-violent behaviors-such as threats, bullying, and classroom
disruptions-are common. Thus, early responses to warning signs are most effective in
preventing problems from escalating.
Intervention programs that reduce behavior problems and
related school violence typically are multifaceted, long-term, and broad reaching. They
also are rigorously implemented. Effective early intervention efforts include working with
small groups or individual students to provide direct support, as well as linking children
and their families to necessary community services and/or providing these services in the
school.
Examples of early intervention components that work
include:
- Providing training and support to staff, students, and
families in understanding factors that can set off and/or exacerbate aggressive outbursts.
- Teaching the child alternative, socially appropriate
replacement responses-such as problem solving and anger control skills.
- Providing skill training, therapeutic assistance, and other
support to the family through community-based services.
- Encouraging the family to make sure that firearms are out
of the child's immediate reach. Law enforcement officers can provide families with
information about safe firearm storage as well as guidelines for addressing children's
access to and possession of firearms.
In some cases, more comprehensive early interventions are
called for to address the needs of troubled children. Focused, coordinated, proven
interventions reduce violent behavior. Following are several comprehensive approaches that
effective schools are using to provide early intervention to students who are at risk of
becoming violent toward themselves or others.
Intervention Tactic: Teaching Positive Interaction
Skills
Although most schools do teach positive social interaction
skills indirectly, some have adopted social skills programs specifically designed to
prevent or reduce antisocial behavior in troubled children. In fact, the direct teaching
of social problem solving and social decision making is now a standard feature of most
effective drug and violence prevention programs. Children who are at risk of becoming
violent toward themselves or others need additional support. They often need to learn
interpersonal, problem solving, and conflict resolution skills at home and in school. They
also may need more intensive assistance in learning how to stop and think before they
react, and to listen effectively.
Intervention Tactic: Providing Comprehensive
Services
In some cases, the early intervention may involve getting
services to families. The violence prevention and response team together with the child
and family designs a comprehensive intervention plan that focuses on reducing aggressive
behaviors and supporting responsible behaviors at school, in the home, and in the
community. When multiple services are required there also must be psychological counseling
and ongoing consultation with classroom teachers, school staff, and the family to ensure
intended results occur. All services-including community services-must be coordinated and
progress must be monitored and evaluated carefully.
Intervention Tactic: Referring the Child for
Special Education Evaluation
If there is evidence of persistent problem behavior or
poor academic achievement, it may be appropriate to conduct a formal assessment to
determine if the child is disabled and eligible for special education and related services
under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). If
a multidisciplinary team determines that the child is eligible for services under the
IDEA, an individualized educational program (IEP) should be developed by a team that
includes a parent, a regular educator, a special educator, an evaluator, a representative
of the local school district, the child (if appropriate), and others as appropriate. This
team will identify the support necessary to enable the child to learn-including the
strategies and support systems necessary to address any behavior that may impede the
child's learning or the learning of his or her peers.
Providing Intensive, Individualized Interventions for Students with
Severe Behavioral Problems
Children who show dangerous patterns and a potential for
more serious violence usually require more intensive interventions that involve multiple
agencies, community-based service providers, and intense family support. By working with
families and community services, schools can comprehensively and effectively
intervene.
Effective individualized interventions provide a range of
services for students. Multiple, intensive, focused approaches used over time can reduce
the chances for continued offenses and the potential for violence. The child, his or her
family, and appropriate school staff should be involved in developing and monitoring the
interventions.
Nontraditional schooling in an alternative school or
therapeutic facility may be required in severe cases where the safety of students and
staff remains a concern, or when the complexity of the intervention plan warrants it.
Research has shown that effective alternative programs can have long-term positive results
by reducing expulsions and court referrals. Effective alternative programs support
students in meeting high academic and behavioral standards. They provide anger and impulse
control training, psychological counseling, effective academic and remedial instruction,
and vocational training as appropriate. Such programs also make provisions for active
family involvement. Moreover, they offer guidance and staff support when the child returns
to his or her regular school.
Providing a Foundation To Prevent and Reduce Violent Behavior
Schoolwide strategies create a foundation that is more
responsive to children in general--one that makes interventions for individual
children more effective and efficient.
Effective and safe schools are places where there is
strong leadership, caring faculty, parent and community involvement--including law
enforcement officials--and student participation in the design of programs and policies.
Effective and safe schools also are places where prevention and intervention programs are
based upon careful assessment of student problems, where community members help set
measurable goals and objectives, where research-based prevention and intervention
approaches are used, and where evaluations are conducted regularly to ensure that the
programs are meeting stated goals. Effective and safe schools are also places where
teachers and staff have access to qualified consultants who can help them address
behavioral and academic barriers to learning.
Effective schools ensure that the physical environment of
the school is safe, and that schoolwide policies are in place to support responsible
behaviors.
Characteristics of a Safe Physical Environment
Prevention starts by making sure the school campus is a
safe and caring place. Effective and safe schools communicate a strong sense of security.
Experts suggest that school officials can enhance physical safety by:
- Supervising access to the building and grounds.
- Reducing class size and school size.
- Adjusting scheduling to minimize time in the hallways or in
potentially dangerous locations. Traffic flow patterns can be modified to limit potential
for conflicts or altercations.
- Conducting a building safety audit in consultation with
school security personnel and/or law enforcement experts. Effective schools adhere to
federal, state, and local nondiscrimination and public safety laws, and use guidelines set
by the state department of education.
- Closing school campuses during lunch periods.
- Adopting a school policy on uniforms.
- Arranging supervision at critical times (for example, in
hallways between classes) and having a plan to deploy supervisory staff to areas where
incidents are likely to occur.
- Prohibiting students from congregating in areas where they
are likely to engage in rule-breaking or intimidating and aggressive behaviors.
- Having adults visibly present throughout the school
building. This includes encouraging parents to visit the school.
- Staggering dismissal times and lunch periods.
- Monitoring the surrounding school grounds-including
landscaping, parking lots, and bus stops.
- Coordinating with local police to ensure that there are
safe routes to and from school.
In addition to targeting areas for increased safety
measures, schools also should identify safe areas where staff and children should go in
the event of a crisis.
The physical condition of the school building also has an
impact on student attitude, behavior, and motivation to achieve. Typically, there tend to
be more incidents of fighting and violence in school buildings that are dirty, too cold or
too hot, filled with graffiti, in need of repair, or unsanitary.
Characteristics of Schoolwide Policies that
Support Responsible Behavior
The opportunities for inappropriate behaviors that
precipitate violence are greater in a disorderly and undisciplined school climate. A
growing number of schools are discovering that the most effective way to reduce
suspensions, expulsions, office referrals, and other similar actions--strategies that do
not result in making schools safer--is to emphasize a proactive approach to discipline.
Effective schools are implementing schoolwide campaigns
that establish high expectations and provide support for socially appropriate behavior.
They reinforce positive behavior and highlight sanctions against aggressive behavior. All
staff, parents, students, and community members are informed about problem behavior, what
they can do to counteract it, and how they can reinforce and reward positive behavior. In
turn, the entire school community makes a commitment to behaving responsibly.
Effective and safe schools develop and consistently enforce schoolwide rules that are
clear, broad-based, and fair. Rules and disciplinary procedures are developed
collaboratively by representatives of the total educational community. They are
communicated clearly to all parties-but most important, they are followed consistently by
everyone.
School communities that have undertaken schoolwide
approaches do the following things:
- Develop a schoolwide disciplinary policy that includes a
code of conduct, specific rules and consequences that can accommodate student differences
on a case-by-case basis when necessary. (If one already exists, review and modify it if
necessary.) Be sure to include a description of school anti-harassment and anti-violence
policies and due process rights.
- Ensure that the cultural values and educational goals of
the community are reflected in the rules. These values should be expressed in a statement
that precedes the schoolwide disciplinary policy.
- Include school staff, students, and families in the
development, discussion, and implementation of fair rules. Provide schoolwide and
classroom support to implement these rules. Strategies that have been found to support
students include class discussions, schoolwide assemblies, student government, and
participation on discipline teams. In addition, peer mediation and conflict resolution
have been implemented widely in schools to promote a climate of nonviolence.
- Be sure consequences are commensurate with the offense, and
that rules are written and applied in a nondiscriminatory manner and accommodate cultural
diversity.
- Make sure that if a negative consequence (such as
withdrawing privileges) is used, it is combined with positive strategies for teaching
socially appropriate behaviors and with strategies that address any external factors that
might have caused the behavior.
- Include a zero tolerance statement for illegal possession
of weapons, alcohol, or drugs. Provide services and support for students who have been
suspended and/or expelled.
Recognizing the warning signs and responding with
comprehensive interventions allows us to help children eliminate negative behaviors and
replace them with positive ones. Active sharing of information and a quick, effective
response by the school community will ensure that the school is safer and the child is
less troubled and can learn.
"Partnerships with local community agencies have
created a safer school and community." Sally Baas, Educator, Coon
Rapids, MN
"Students should feel a sense of responsibility
to inform someone if they're made aware of an individual who may perform a violent act.
They should not feel like they are tattle telling, but more in the sense of saving
someone's life. Students should have a role on the school's violence prevention and
response team because they know what points of student life and school to target." Elsa
Quiroga, Graduate of Mount Eden High School and Student, University of California at
Berkeley
Tips for Parents
Parents can help create safe schools. Here are
some ideas that parents in other communities have tried:
- Discuss the school's discipline policy with your child.
Show your support for the rules, and help your child understand the reasons for them.
- Involve your child in setting rules for appropriate
behavior at home.
- Talk with your child about the violence he or she sees-on
television, in video games, and possibly in the neighborhood. Help your child understand
the consequences of violence.
- Teach your child how to solve problems. Praise your child
when he or she follows through.
- Help your child find ways to show anger that do not involve
verbally or physically hurting others. When you get angry, use it as an opportunity to
model these appropriate responses for your child-and talk about it.
- Help your child understand the value of accepting
individual differences.
- Note any disturbing behaviors in your child. For example,
frequent angry outbursts, excessive fighting and bullying of other children, cruelty to
animals, fire setting, frequent behavior problems at school and in the neighborhood, lack
of friends, and alcohol or drug use can be signs of serious problems. Get help for your
child. Talk with a trusted professional in your child's school or in the community.
- Keep lines of communication open with your child-even when
it is tough. Encourage your child always to let you know where and with whom he or she
will be. Get to know your child's friends.
- Listen to your child if he or she shares concerns about
friends who may be exhibiting troubling behaviors. Share this information with a trusted
professional, such as the school psychologist, principal, or teacher.
- Be involved in your child's school life by supporting and
reviewing homework, talking with his or her teacher(s), and attending school functions
such as parent conferences, class programs, open houses, and PTA meetings.
- Work with your child's school to make it more responsive to
all students and to all families. Share your ideas about how the school can encourage
family involvement, welcome all families, and include them in meaningful ways in their
children's education.
- Encourage your school to offer before- and after-school
programs.
- Volunteer to work with school-based groups concerned with
violence prevention. If none exist, offer to form one.
- Find out if there is a violence prevention group in your
community. Offer to participate in the group's activities.
- Talk with the parents of your child's friends. Discuss how
you can form a team to ensure your children's safety.
- Find out if your employer offers provisions for parents to
participate in school activities.
"Our school system has created a student services
team-including the principal, a special educator, the school psychologist, other
behavioral support personnel, the child development specialist, and others-that meets
weekly to address safety and success for all students. Our teachers and families have easy
access to this team. As part of our plan, we conduct a campus-by-campus risk assessment in
coordination with city, county, and state law enforcement agencies. We provide
interventions for children who are troubled and connect them and their families to
community agencies and mental health services." Lee Patterson,
Assistant Superintendent, Roseberg, OR
Action Steps for Students
There is much students can do to help create
safe schools. Talk to your teachers, parents, and counselor to find out how you can get
involved and do your part to make your school safe. Here are some ideas that students in
other schools have tried:
- Listen to your friends if they share troubling feelings or
thoughts. Encourage them to get help from a trusted adult-such as a school psychologist,
counselor, social worker, leader from the faith community, or other professional. If you
are very concerned, seek help for them. Share your concerns with your parents.
- Create, join, or support student organizations that combat
violence, such as "Students Against Destructive Decisions" and "Young
Heroes Program."
- Work with local businesses and community groups to organize
youth-oriented activities that help young people think of ways to prevent school and
community violence. Share your ideas for how these community groups and businesses can
support your efforts.
- Organize an assembly and invite your school psychologist,
school social worker, and counselor-in addition to student panelists-to share ideas about
how to deal with violence, intimidation, and bullying.
- Get involved in planning, implementing, and evaluating your
school's violence prevention and response plan.
- Participate in violence prevention programs such as peer
mediation and conflict resolution. Employ your new skills in other settings, such as the
home, neighborhood, and community.
- Work with your teachers and administrators to create a safe
process for reporting threats, intimidation, weapon possession, drug selling, gang
activity, graffiti, and vandalism. Use the process.
- Ask for permission to invite a law enforcement officer to
your school to conduct a safety audit and share safety tips, such as traveling in groups
and avoiding areas known to be unsafe. Share your ideas with the officer.
- Help to develop and participate in activities that promote
student understanding of differences and that respect the rights of all.
- Volunteer to be a mentor for younger students and/or
provide tutoring to your peers.
- Know your school's code of conduct and model responsible
behavior. Avoid being part of a crowd when fights break out. Refrain from teasing,
bullying, and intimidating peers.
- Be a role model-take personal responsibility by reacting to
anger without physically or verbally harming others.
- Seek help from your parents or a trusted adult--such as a
school psychologist, social worker, counselor, teacher--if you are experiencing intense
feelings of anger, fear, anxiety, or depression.
"Since we developed the high school peer
mediation program, we have seen a decline in physical fights. We are defusing potentially
dangerous situations." Terry Davis, School Psychologist, Natick,
MA
"Everyone is trained to use consistent language.
We remind students to stop and think. Students also know we will always follow through if
they make poor behavioral choices. As a result, we have been able to diffuse violent
situations." Annette Lambeth, Assistant Principal, Chester County, PA
"Appropriate behavior and respect for others are
emphasized at all times. However, despite our best efforts, unfortunate incidents do
occur. When they do, it is our responsibility to provide appropriate support to meet the
needs of every child." Carol S. Parham, Superintendent of Schools, Anne
Arundel County, MD
"The police are a school's greatest community
asset when effectively preventing and responding to school violence. Building a
relationship with law enforcement strengthens the school's ability to ensure safety."
Gil Kerlikowske, former Police Commissioner, Buffalo, NY
"Everyone follows the same discipline plan.
Everyone-including the lunch room workers and custodians-works as a team. There are always
times when children forget the rules. But there is immediate intervention by faculty and
staff, and even other children. The responsibility is on the students." Anna
Allred, Parent, Lakeland, FL
"It is necessary to provide training and support
to staff. We have provided inservices on behavior management systems that are effective in
regular classroom settings. These inservices have been of great benefit. Numerous schools
throughout our district presently use stop and think, conflict resolution, and peer
mediation." Denise Conrad, Teacher, Toledo, OH
Section
5: What To Do
Developing a Prevention
and Response Plan
Effective schools create a violence prevention and
response plan and form a team that can ensure it is implemented. They use approaches and
strategies based on research about what works.
Creating the Violence Prevention and Response Plan
A sound violence prevention and response plan reflects the
common and the unique needs of educators, students, families, and the greater community.
The plan outlines how all individuals in the school community--administrators, teachers,
parents, students, bus drivers, support staff--will be prepared to spot the behavioral and
emotional signs that indicate a child is troubled, and what they will need to do. The plan
also details how school and community resources can be used to create safe environments
and to manage responses to acute threats and incidents of violence.
An effective written plan includes:
- Descriptions of the early warning signs of potentially
violent behavior and procedures for identifying children who exhibit these signs.
- Descriptions of effective prevention practices the school
community has undertaken to build a foundation that is responsive to all children and
enhances the effectiveness of interventions.
- Descriptions of intervention strategies the school
community can use to help troubled children. These include early interventions for
students who are at risk of behavioral problems, and more intensive, individualized
interventions and resources for students with severe behavioral problems or mental health
needs.
- A crisis intervention plan that includes immediate
responses for imminent warning signs and violent behavior, as well as a contingency plan
to be used in the aftermath of a tragedy.
The plan must be consistent with federal, state, and local
laws. It also should have the support of families and the local school board.
Recommendations in this guide will prove most meaningful
when the entire school community is involved in developing and implementing the plan. In
addition, everyone should be provided with relevant training and support on a regular
basis. Finally, there should be a clearly delineated mechanism for monitoring and
assessing violence prevention efforts.
Forming the Prevention and Response Team
It can be helpful to establish a school-based team to
oversee the preparation and implementation of the prevention and response plan. This does
not need to be a new team; however, a designated core group should be entrusted with this
important responsibility.
The core team should ensure that every member of the
greater school community accepts and adopts the violence prevention and response plan.
This buy-in is essential if all members of the school community are expected to feel
comfortable sharing concerns about children who appear troubled. Too often, caring
individuals remain silent because they have no way to express their concerns.
Typically, the core team includes the building
administrator, general and special education teachers, parent(s), and a pupil support
services representative (a school psychologist, social worker, or counselor), school
resource officer, and a safe and drug-free schools program coordinator. If no school
psychologist or mental health professional is available to the staff, involve someone from
an outside mental health agency. Other individuals may be added to the team depending on
the task. For example, when undertaking schoolwide prevention planning, the team might be
expanded to include students, representatives of community agencies and organizations, the
school nurse, school board members, and support staff (secretaries, bus drivers, and
custodians). Similarly, crisis response planning can be enhanced with the presence of a
central office administrator, security officer, and youth officer or community police team
member.
The core team also should coordinate with any school
advisory boards already in place. For example, most effective schools have developed an
advisory board of parents and community leaders that meets regularly with school
administrators. While these advisory groups generally offer advice and support, that role
can be expanded to bringing resources related to violence prevention and intervention into
the school.
Consider involving a variety of community leaders and
parents when building the violence prevention and response team:
- Parent group leaders, such as PTA officers.
- Law enforcement personnel.
- Attorneys, judges, and probation officers.
- Clergy and other representatives of the faith community.
- Media representatives.
- Violence prevention group representatives.
- Mental health and child welfare personnel.
- Physicians and nurses.
- Family agency and family resource center staff.
- Business leaders.
- Recreation, cultural, and arts organizations staff.
- Youth workers and volunteers.
- Local officials, including school board members and
representatives from special commissions.
- Interest group representatives and grass roots community
organization members.
- College or university faculty.
- Members of local advisory boards.
- Other influential community members.
The school board should authorize and support the
formation of and the tasks undertaken by the violence prevention and response team.
While we cannot prevent all violence from occurring, we
can do much to reduce the likelihood of its occurrence. Through thoughtful planning and
the establishment of a school violence prevention and response team, we can avert many
crises and be prepared when they do happen.
"Our district initiated a safety task force
involving parents, students, teachers, support staff, administrators, and community
members to enhance our plan for safety and crisis management. It works." Richard
E. Berry, Superintendent, Houston, TX
"We need to give attention to the segment of the
population that includes bus drivers, secretaries, and cafeteria workers. They are a very
important yet often overlooked group of people who can provide support to children." Betty
Stockton, School Psychologist, Jonesboro, AR
Action Planning Checklist
Prevention-Intervention-Crisis
Response
What To Look For--Key Characteristics of
Responsive and Safe Schools
Does my school have characteristics that:
__ Are responsive to all children?
What To Look For--Early Warning Signs of
Violence
Has my school taken steps to ensure that all staff,
students, and families:
__ Understand the principles underlying the identification
of early warning signs?
__ Know how to identify and respond to imminent warning signs?
__ Are able to identify early warning signs?
What To Do--Intervention: Getting Help for
Troubled Children
Does my school:
__ Understand the principles underlying intervention?
__ Make early intervention available for students at risk of behavioral problems?
__ Provide individualized, intensive interventions for students with severe behavioral
problems?
__ Have schoolwide preventive strategies in place that support early intervention?
What To Do--Crisis Response
Does my school:
__ Understand the principles underlying crisis response?
__ Have a procedure for intervening during a crisis to ensure safety?
__ Know how to respond in the aftermath of tragedy?
Section
6: What To Do
Responding to Crisis
Violence can happen at any time, anywhere. Effective and
safe schools are well prepared for any potential crisis or violent act.
Crisis response is an important component of a violence prevention and response plan. Two
components that should be addressed in that plan are:
- Intervening during a crisis to ensure safety.
- Responding in the aftermath of tragedy.
In addition to establishing a contingency plan, effective
schools provide adequate preparation for their core violence prevention and response team.
The team not only plans what to do when violence strikes, but it also ensures that staff
and students know how to behave. Students and staff feel secure because there is a
well-conceived plan and everyone understands what to do or whom to ask for instructions.
Principles Underlying Crisis Response
As with other interventions, crisis intervention planning
is built on a foundation that is safe and responsive to children. Crisis planning should
include:
- Training for teachers and staff in a range of skills-from
dealing with escalating classroom situations to responding to a serious crisis.
- Reference to district or state procedures. Many states now
have recommended crisis intervention manuals available to their local education agencies
and schools.
- Involvement of community agencies, including police, fire,
and rescue, as well as hospital, health, social welfare, and mental health services. The
faith community, juvenile justice, and related family support systems also have been
successfully included in such team plans.
- Provision for the core team to meet regularly to identify
potentially troubled or violent students and situations that may be dangerous.
Effective school communities also have made a point to
find out about federal, state, and local resources that are available to help during and
after a crisis, and to secure their support and involvement before a crisis occurs.
Intervening During a Crisis To Ensure Safety
Weapons used in or around schools, bomb threats or
explosions, and fights, as well as natural disasters, accidents, and suicides call for
immediate, planned action, and long-term, post-crisis intervention. Planning for such
contingencies reduces chaos and trauma. Thus, the crisis response part of the plan also
must include contingency provisions. Such provisions may include:
- Evacuation procedures and other procedures to protect
students and staff from harm. It is critical that schools identify safe areas where
students and staff should go in a crisis. It also is important that schools practice
having staff and students evacuate the premises in an orderly manner.
- An effective, fool-proof communication system. Individuals
must have designated roles and responsibilities to prevent confusion.
- A process for securing immediate external support from law
enforcement officials and other relevant community agencies.
All provisions and procedures should be monitored and
reviewed regularly by the core team.
Just as staff should understand and practice fire drill
procedures routinely, they should practice responding to the presence of firearms and
other weapons, severe threats of violence, hostage situations, and other acts of terror.
School communities can provide staff and students with such practice in the following
ways:
- Provide inservice training for all faculty and staff to
explain the plan and exactly what to do in a crisis. Where appropriate, include community
police, youth workers, and other community members.
- Produce a written manual or small pamphlet or flip chart to
remind teachers and staff of their duties.
- Practice responding to the imminent warning signs of
violence. Make sure all adults in the building have an understanding of what they might do
to prevent violence (e.g., being observant, knowing when to get help, and modeling good
problem solving, anger management, and/or conflict resolution skills) and how they can
safely support each other.
Responding in the Aftermath of Crisis
Members of the crisis team should understand natural
stress reactions. They also should be familiar with how different individuals might
respond to death and loss, including developmental considerations, religious beliefs, and
cultural values.
Effective schools ensure a coordinated community response.
Professionals both within the school district and within the greater community should be
involved to assist individuals who are at risk for severe stress reactions.
Schools that have experienced tragedy have included the
following provisions in their response plans:
- Help parents understand children's reactions to
violence. In the aftermath of tragedy, children may experience unrealistic fears
of the future, have difficulty sleeping, become physically ill, and be easily
distracted-to name a few of the common symptoms.
- Help teachers and other staff deal with their
reactions to the crisis. Debriefing and grief counseling is just as important for
adults as it is for students.
- Help students and faculty adjust after the crisis. Provide
both short-term and long-term mental health counseling following a crisis.
- Help victims and family members of victims re-enter
the school environment. Often, school friends need guidance in how to act. The
school community should work with students and parents to design a plan that makes it
easier for victims and their classmates to adjust.
- Help students and teachers address the return of a
previously removed student to the school community. Whether the student is
returning from a juvenile detention facility or a mental health facility, schools need to
coordinate with staff from that facility to explore how to make the transition as
uneventful as possible.
"Early intervention and quick response from our
school district team resulted in no one getting hurt." Pamela Cain,
Superintendent, Wirt County, WV
Crisis Procedure Checklist
A crisis plan must address many complex
contingencies. There should be a step-by-step procedure to use when a crisis occurs. An
example follows:
__ Assess life/safety issues immediately.
__ Provide immediate emergency medical care.
__ Call 911 and notify police/rescue first. Call the superintendent second.
__ Convene the crisis team to assess the situation and implement the crisis response
procedures.
__ Evaluate available and needed resources.
__ Alert school staff to the situation.
__ Activate the crisis communication procedure and system of verification.
__ Secure all areas.
__ Implement evacuation and other procedures to protect students and staff from harm.
Avoid dismissing students to unknown care.
__ Adjust the bell schedule to ensure safety during the crisis.
__ Alert persons in charge of various information systems to prevent confusion and
misinformation. Notify parents.
__ Contact appropriate community agencies and the school district's public information
office, if appropriate.
__ Implement post-crisis procedures.
Section 7
Conclusion
Crises involving sudden violence in schools are traumatic
in large measure because they are rare and unexpected. Everyone is touched in some way. In
the wake of such a crisis, members of the school community are asked--and ask
themselves--what could have been done to prevent it.
We know from the research that schools can meet the
challenge of reducing violence. The school community can be supported through:
- School board policies that address both prevention and
intervention for troubled children and youth.
- Schoolwide violence prevention and response plans that
include the entire school community in their development and implementation.
- Training in recognizing the early warning signs of
potential violent behavior.
- Procedures that encourage staff, parents, and students to
share their concerns about children who exhibit early warning signs.
- Procedures for responding quickly to concerns about
troubled children.
- Adequate support in getting help for troubled children.
Everyone who cares about children cares about ending
violence. It is time to break the silence that too often characterizes even the most
well-meaning school communities. Research and expert-based information is available for
school communities to use in developing and strengthening programs that can prevent
crises.
School safety is everyone's job. Teachers, administrators,
parents, community members, and students all must commit to meeting the challenge of
getting help for children who show signs of being troubled.
"Coordinated school efforts can help. But the
solution does not just rest in the schools. Together we must develop solutions that are
community-wide and coordinated, that include schools, families, courts, law enforcement,
community agencies, representatives of the faith community, business, and the broader
community." Wilmer Cody, Kentucky Commissioner of Education
Section 8
Methodology,
Contributors, and Research Support
This guide synthesizes an extensive knowledge base on
violence and violence prevention. It includes research from a variety of disciplines, as
well as the experience and effective practices of teachers, school psychologists,
counselors, social workers, family members, youth workers, and youth.
Much of the research found in this guide was funded by
federal offices whose senior staff were involved in supporting and reviewing this
document. They include:
- Office of Special Education Programs, Office of Special
Education and Rehabilitative Services, U.S. Department of Education.
- Safe and Drug-Free Schools Program, Office of Elementary
and Secondary Education, U.S. Department of Education.
- Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention and
National Institute for Justice, U.S. Department of Justice.
- National Institute of Mental Health and Center for Mental
Health Services, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
The guide was produced by the Center for Effective
Collaboration and Practice of the American Institutes for Research in collaboration with
the National Association of School Psychologists. The project was led by:
- Kevin P. Dwyer, Principal Investigator,
National Association of School Psychologists
- David Osher, Project Director, American
Institutes for Research
The guide was developed in collaboration with Cynthia
Warger of Warger, Eavy and Associates.
Each assertion in the guide is backed by empirical data
and/or expert consensus. Research references can be found on the project's Web site at http://cecp.air.org/guide.
The guide was conceptualized by an interdisciplinary
expert panel. The writing team, led by Kevin P. Dwyer, included members of the expert
panel-George Bear, Norris Haynes, Paul Kingery, Howard Knoff, Peter Sheras, Russell Skiba,
Leslie Skinner, and Betty Stockton-in addition to David Osher and Cynthia Warger. The
writing team drew upon the other expert panelists for guidance and for resources.
The first draft was reviewed for accuracy by the entire
expert panel as well as staff from the federal agencies. The federal reviewers are listed
on the project's Web site at http://cecp.air.org/guide.
The second draft was reviewed by family members, teachers,
principals, and youth, in addition to leaders of major national associations. The expert
panel reviewed the document again at this stage. These reviewers are also listed on the
project's Web site at http://cecp.air.org/guide.
Also On The Web
- An annotated version of the guide with references to
support each assertion as well as references to practical materials that can be
employed to implement the recommendations it contains.
- Additional resources that can be employed to implement the
recommendations contained in the guide.
- Links to other Web sites that provide useful and usable
information.
- English and Spanish versions of the guide that can be
downloaded for dissemination.
Expert Panel Members
The expert panel included national experts
from a variety of disciplines, as well as principals, teachers, pupil personnel staff,
families, and youth:
J. Randy Alton, Teacher
Montgomery County, MD
George Bear, Professor
University of Delaware
Renee Brimfield, Principal
Montgomery County, MD
Michael Bullis, Professor
University of Oregon
Andrea Canter,
Lead School Psychologist
Minneapolis, MN
Gregory Carter, Teacher
Richmond, VA
Deborah Crockett, School Psychologist
Atlanta, GA
Scott Decker, Professor
University of Missouri-St. Louis
Maurice Elias, Professor
Rutgers University, NJ
Michael J. Furlong,
Associate Professor
University of CA-Santa Barbara
Susan Gorin, Executive Director
National Association of School Psychologists
Bethesda, MD
Denise Gottfredson, Director
National Center for Justice
University of Maryland
Beatrix Hamburg, Professor
Cornell Medical Center, NY
Norris Haynes, Director
Yale University Child Study Center
DJ Ida, Director
Asian Pacific Development Center
Denver, CO
Yvonne Johnson, Parent
Washington, D.C.
Gil Kerlikowske, Former Police Commissioner
Buffalo, NY
Paul Kingery, Director
Hamilton Fish National Institute on School and Community Violence
Arlington, VA
Howard Knoff, Professor
University of South Florida
Judith Lee Ladd, President
American School Counselors Association
Arlington, VA
Brenda Muhammad, Founder
Mothers of Murdered Sons & Daughters
Atlanta, GA
Ron Nelson, Associate Professor
Arizona State University
Dennis Nowicki, Police Chief
Charlotte, NC
Scott Poland
Director, Psychological Services
Cyprus-Fairbanks ISD
Houston, TX
Gale Porter, Director
East Baltimore (MD) Mental Health Partnership
Elsa Quiroga, Student
University of California-Berkeley
Michael Rosenberg, Professor
John Hopkins University
Mary Schwab-Stone, Associate Professor
Yale University Child Study Center
Peter Sheras, Associate Director
Virginia Youth Violence Project
University of Virginia
Russell Skiba, Professor
University of Indiana
Leslie Skinner, Assistant Professor
Temple University
Jeff Sprague, Co-Director
Institute on Violence and Destructive Behavior, University of Oregon
Betty Stockton, School Psychologist
Jonesboro, AR
Richard Verdugo, Senior Policy Analyst
National Education Association
Washington, DC
Hill Walker, Co-Director
Institute on Violence and Destructive Behavior, University of Oregon
The following represented federal agencies on
the panel:
Renee Bradley
U.S. Department of Education
Betty Chemers
U.S. Department of Justice
Lou Danielson
U.S. Department of Education
Kellie Dressler
U.S. Department of Justice
David Frank
U.S. Department of Education
Cathy Girouard
U.S. Department of Education
Tom V. Hanley
U.S. Department of Education
Tom Hehir
U.S. Department of Education
Kelly Henderson
U.S. Departme |