Source
National Crime Prevention Council
Although many schools are
safe, others can be just as susceptible to crime and
violence as other environments. According to the
Bureau of Justice Statistics, 17 children and
teens were killed at school and five children killed
themselves in the year ending June 30, 2002.
Moreover, in a 2001 survey by the
National School Safety Center (NSSC), more
than 60 percent of high school boys and 15 percent of
middle school boys said they could get a gun if they
wanted to. At the same time, 69 percent of high school
and 27 percent of middle school boys said they knew how
to get drugs. Thirty percent of the kids reported being
bullied. In what could be an ominous precursor to adult
behavior, nearly a quarter of the students in another
2001 survey published by NSSC reported that they knew at
least one student at their school who had been a victim
of dating violence.
There are no easy answers to the disturbing questions
these statistics raise, but it is clear that
collaboration between parents, educators, law
enforcement, and crime prevention practitioners is
essential.
Tips
Enforce zero-tolerance
policies toward the presence of weapons, alcohol, and
illegal drugs.
Establish and enforce drug- and gun-free zones.
Establish policies that declare that anything that is
illegal off campus is illegal on campus.
Engage students in maintaining a good learning environment
by establishing a teen court.
Develop protocols between law enforcement and the school
about ways to share information on at-risk youth.
Develop resource lists that provide referral services for
students who are depressed or otherwise under stress.
Involve teens in designing and running programs such as
mediation, mentoring, peer assistance, School Crime Watch,
and graffiti removal programs.
Insist that all students put outerwear in their lockers
during school hours.
Require all students to tuck in their shirts to keep them
from hiding weapons.
Develop and enforce dress codes that ban gang-related and
gang-style clothing.
Establish a policy of positive identification such as ID
badges for administrators, staff, students, and visitors.
Deny students permission to leave school for lunch and
other non-school-related activities during school hours.
More on
School Safety
Be Safe and Sound program
Teens, Crime, and the Community program
What Parents Can Do
Training: School Safety Assessment
More NCPC Resources