Early Warning, Timely Response
A Guide to Safe Schools
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.
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. 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. 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.
- 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. 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. 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.
Students who have been treated unfairly may become scapegoats and/or targets of violence.
In some cases, victims may react in aggressive ways. 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.
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. 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. 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
Source: U.S. Department of Education
August 1998
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