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PROGRAMS TO TREAT AND 
PREVENT SCHOOL VIOLENCE 
By 
Dr. Paul A. Rodríguez
School-Based Violence Programs 
Four ways to decrease school violence from an institutional point of view: 
1. Parent and community involvement 
2. Character education 
3. Violence prevention and conflict resolution curricula 
4. Bullying prevention 
Parent and Community Involvement 
 Parent involvement encourages a more constructive learning environment by creating 
goals for parents in the home and teachers in the school that work to enhance both 
environments and are consistent in their objectives. 
 Increased involvement by parents has been shown to provide better teacher 
satisfaction, improved parent understanding of school policies, better parent-child 
communication, and more successful and effective school programs. 
Character Education 
 Character education is the notion that schools have to take a direct role in teaching 
values to children. 
In elementary school, character education should achieve three objectives: 
1. Promote development away from egocentrism and excessive individualism and 
toward cooperative relationships and mutual respect. 
2. Foster the growth of moral agency—the capacity to think, feel and act morally. 
2
3. Develop in the classroom and in the school a moral community based on fairness, caring 
and participation—such a community being a moral end in itself as well as a support 
system for the character development of each individual student. 
There are four processes in the classroom to achieve these goals: 
1. Building self-esteem and a sense of community 
2. Learning to work together and to help others 
3. Thinking about the outcomes of one’s behavior and it s impact on others 
4. Learning to make decisions that reflect group input and are participatory 
Violence Prevention and Conflict Resolution Curricula 
These approaches teach children to use alternatives to violence when resolving 
interpersonal conflicts. 
1. Programs that teach children conflict resolution strategies 
2. Actual conflict resolution teams headed up by students who patrol the school grounds 
and can provide conflict resolution as a way of reducing tension before the conflict is 
reported to the school authorities. 
3. Films, role-plays and simulations may be used. 
4. Parents might also become involved and conflict resolution might be extended to 
problems in the home. 
5. Topics may include, anger management, learning to identify and express feelings 
about others, discussing issues related to racial, ethnic and gender differences and 
learning to cope with stress. 3
Bullying Prevention Programs 
 Bullying prevention programs are schoolwide zero-tolerance policies. 
 The programs include improved adult supervision 
 Classroom rules against bullying 
 Positive and negative consequences for following and violating rules, respectively, 
interventions with the bullies and the victims 
 Meetings with parents of bullies and victims 
 Regular classroom meetings to discuss ways of dealing with bullying 
 Effective programs have significantly reduced the rate of bullying and have led to much 
better school climates 
Additional Approaches to Decreasing School Violence 
 A no-tolerance policy for any sort of a dangerous weapon 
 Frequent searches for weapons in lockers and weapons detection at the school 
entryway 
 Suitable activities after school 
 Programs to give children and adolescents an opportunity to stay after school under 
supervision to improve their scholastic performance 
 Work in the community through help from the school 
 Antigang programs and to maintain dress codes that forbid the use of gang 
paraphernalia. 
4
 Self-esteem programs for children who suffer from low self-esteem 
 Initiate programs to provide services to children from violent homes and their families 
Assertiveness training for children 
 Aggression is an action that enhances the aggressor while it minimizes and violated the 
rights of others 
 Intent of aggressive behavior is to humiliate and dominate 
 Passive behaviors are self-denying and inhibiting, as a person’s own rights are 
disregarded and he or she gives in to demands of others 
 Assertiveness is a “win-win” behavior in which an individual can stand up for their own 
rights in such a way that the rights of others are not disregarded 
The Relationship between Family Deterioration and School Violence 
 17% of all homicides in the U. S. occur within a family situation 
 When parents use harsh physical means to discipline their children, children learn that 
battering and physical aggression are normal ways of expressing frustration and 
resolving problems 
 Children who demonstrate physically aggressive and antisocial behaviors and have 
developmental and academic problems before age 9 display more aggressive 
tendencies as adults than do individuals who do not demonstrate early behavioral and 
educational problems 
 It is believed that abuse and neglect by parents model the way a child is likely to 
interact with others 5
 Schools are one of the earliest social situations in which children may feel vulnerable, 
inadequate, angry, less intelligent, ignored and a host of other emotions that may 
result in early aggression 
 Educators must be proactive and demand that some of the funds spent on school 
safety efforts be allocated to support educators’ time to reflect on the emotional 
wellbeing of each student 
 Too often, children who begin to act out in the classroom are placed in special 
education classes and are classified as “Severely Emotionally Disturbed, following a 
serious offense, as the path of least resistance.” 
 Children who act out do not fare well in special education classes and can disrupt a 
truly disabled population of students 
 Education must also include the emotional attributes of moral maturity, such as 
conscience, self-respect, empathy and self-control. 
School Violence in Rural Communities 
 It is often thought that rural means nonviolent and that violence only takes place in the 
urban schools and communities with large inner cities, but the reality is that many 
school killings have taken place in small, reasonably affluent communities with well-regarded 
schools 
 It is often thought that poverty is an urban plight, but rural schools often suffer from 
extreme underfunding by poor rural counties that hope to provide more but lack the 
tax base to do so 
6
In rural communities, people often know one another over a lifetime 
 Rural communities have problems with school violence and often have a more difficult 
time dealing with those problems than do urban schools 
 Rural communities are often ill equipped for the people who have different cultures, 
religious beliefs, languages and strong ideas about the seriousness and importance of 
education 
 Many of the same programs suggested for other schools must be implemented 
 New ways of funding schools must be devised so that rural schools are not resource-poor 
schools 
Reflections 
1. What are your thoughts on giving added responsibilities to schools to socialize 
children whose families cannot do it? 
2. What are your thoughts that school must be obligated to report violence in all of its 
manifestations if our violence problem is to be resolved? 
3. Where should children who act out be placed in schools? 
4. Do you think that the nature of American families are deteriorating? Why? What can 
be done? 
5. What are your thoughts on self-esteem programs and their effectiveness in reducing 
aggression in schools? 
7

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Programs to Treat and Prevent School Violence

  • 1. PROGRAMS TO TREAT AND PREVENT SCHOOL VIOLENCE By Dr. Paul A. Rodríguez
  • 2. School-Based Violence Programs Four ways to decrease school violence from an institutional point of view: 1. Parent and community involvement 2. Character education 3. Violence prevention and conflict resolution curricula 4. Bullying prevention Parent and Community Involvement  Parent involvement encourages a more constructive learning environment by creating goals for parents in the home and teachers in the school that work to enhance both environments and are consistent in their objectives.  Increased involvement by parents has been shown to provide better teacher satisfaction, improved parent understanding of school policies, better parent-child communication, and more successful and effective school programs. Character Education  Character education is the notion that schools have to take a direct role in teaching values to children. In elementary school, character education should achieve three objectives: 1. Promote development away from egocentrism and excessive individualism and toward cooperative relationships and mutual respect. 2. Foster the growth of moral agency—the capacity to think, feel and act morally. 2
  • 3. 3. Develop in the classroom and in the school a moral community based on fairness, caring and participation—such a community being a moral end in itself as well as a support system for the character development of each individual student. There are four processes in the classroom to achieve these goals: 1. Building self-esteem and a sense of community 2. Learning to work together and to help others 3. Thinking about the outcomes of one’s behavior and it s impact on others 4. Learning to make decisions that reflect group input and are participatory Violence Prevention and Conflict Resolution Curricula These approaches teach children to use alternatives to violence when resolving interpersonal conflicts. 1. Programs that teach children conflict resolution strategies 2. Actual conflict resolution teams headed up by students who patrol the school grounds and can provide conflict resolution as a way of reducing tension before the conflict is reported to the school authorities. 3. Films, role-plays and simulations may be used. 4. Parents might also become involved and conflict resolution might be extended to problems in the home. 5. Topics may include, anger management, learning to identify and express feelings about others, discussing issues related to racial, ethnic and gender differences and learning to cope with stress. 3
  • 4. Bullying Prevention Programs  Bullying prevention programs are schoolwide zero-tolerance policies.  The programs include improved adult supervision  Classroom rules against bullying  Positive and negative consequences for following and violating rules, respectively, interventions with the bullies and the victims  Meetings with parents of bullies and victims  Regular classroom meetings to discuss ways of dealing with bullying  Effective programs have significantly reduced the rate of bullying and have led to much better school climates Additional Approaches to Decreasing School Violence  A no-tolerance policy for any sort of a dangerous weapon  Frequent searches for weapons in lockers and weapons detection at the school entryway  Suitable activities after school  Programs to give children and adolescents an opportunity to stay after school under supervision to improve their scholastic performance  Work in the community through help from the school  Antigang programs and to maintain dress codes that forbid the use of gang paraphernalia. 4
  • 5.  Self-esteem programs for children who suffer from low self-esteem  Initiate programs to provide services to children from violent homes and their families Assertiveness training for children  Aggression is an action that enhances the aggressor while it minimizes and violated the rights of others  Intent of aggressive behavior is to humiliate and dominate  Passive behaviors are self-denying and inhibiting, as a person’s own rights are disregarded and he or she gives in to demands of others  Assertiveness is a “win-win” behavior in which an individual can stand up for their own rights in such a way that the rights of others are not disregarded The Relationship between Family Deterioration and School Violence  17% of all homicides in the U. S. occur within a family situation  When parents use harsh physical means to discipline their children, children learn that battering and physical aggression are normal ways of expressing frustration and resolving problems  Children who demonstrate physically aggressive and antisocial behaviors and have developmental and academic problems before age 9 display more aggressive tendencies as adults than do individuals who do not demonstrate early behavioral and educational problems  It is believed that abuse and neglect by parents model the way a child is likely to interact with others 5
  • 6.  Schools are one of the earliest social situations in which children may feel vulnerable, inadequate, angry, less intelligent, ignored and a host of other emotions that may result in early aggression  Educators must be proactive and demand that some of the funds spent on school safety efforts be allocated to support educators’ time to reflect on the emotional wellbeing of each student  Too often, children who begin to act out in the classroom are placed in special education classes and are classified as “Severely Emotionally Disturbed, following a serious offense, as the path of least resistance.”  Children who act out do not fare well in special education classes and can disrupt a truly disabled population of students  Education must also include the emotional attributes of moral maturity, such as conscience, self-respect, empathy and self-control. School Violence in Rural Communities  It is often thought that rural means nonviolent and that violence only takes place in the urban schools and communities with large inner cities, but the reality is that many school killings have taken place in small, reasonably affluent communities with well-regarded schools  It is often thought that poverty is an urban plight, but rural schools often suffer from extreme underfunding by poor rural counties that hope to provide more but lack the tax base to do so 6
  • 7. In rural communities, people often know one another over a lifetime  Rural communities have problems with school violence and often have a more difficult time dealing with those problems than do urban schools  Rural communities are often ill equipped for the people who have different cultures, religious beliefs, languages and strong ideas about the seriousness and importance of education  Many of the same programs suggested for other schools must be implemented  New ways of funding schools must be devised so that rural schools are not resource-poor schools Reflections 1. What are your thoughts on giving added responsibilities to schools to socialize children whose families cannot do it? 2. What are your thoughts that school must be obligated to report violence in all of its manifestations if our violence problem is to be resolved? 3. Where should children who act out be placed in schools? 4. Do you think that the nature of American families are deteriorating? Why? What can be done? 5. What are your thoughts on self-esteem programs and their effectiveness in reducing aggression in schools? 7