
Crime Prevention: Working Together To Create Safer Schools
Students, Parents, School Staff, Community Partners and Law
Enforcement
Ideas on how to create a safe school
Creating a safe place where children can learn and grow
depends on a partnership among students, parents, teachers, and
other community institutions. To prevent school violence each
partner has to take action.
Here are some practical suggestions for young people, parents,
school staff and others in the community.
Students
- Settle
arguments with words, not fists or weapons. If you don’t know
how, learn how.
- Don’t carry
guns, knives, or other weapons to school.
- Report crimes
or suspicious activities to the police, school authorities or
parents.
- Tell a school
official immediately if you see another student with a gun,
knife or other weapon.
- Tell a
teacher, parent or trusted adult if you’re worried about a
bully, threats or violence by another student.
- Learn safe
routes for traveling to and from school and stick to them. Know
good places to seek help.
- Don’t use
alcohol or other drugs, and stay away from places and people
associated with them.
- Get involved
in your school’s anti-violence activities. Hold an anti-violence
poster contest, hold an anti-drug rally, volunteer to counsel
peers. If there isn’t a program at your school, help start one.
Parents
- Sharpen your
parenting skills. Emphasize and build on your children’s
strengths.
- Teach your
children how to reduce their risks of becoming crime victims.
- Know where
your kids are, what they are doing, and who they are with, at
all times.
- Set clear
rules about acceptable activities, in advance.
- Ask your
children about what goes on during the school day. Listen to
what they say and take their concerns and worries seriously.
- Help your
children learn non-violent ways to handle frustration, anger and
conflict.
- Do not allow
your child to carry guns, knives or other weapons.
- Become
involved in your child’s school activities, PTA and field trips,
and help out in class or the lunchroom.
- Work with
other parents in your neighborhood to start a block parent
program.
School staff
- Evaluate your
school’s safety objectively. Set targets for improvement. Be
honest about crime problems and work toward improving the
situation.
- Develop
consistent disciplinary policies, good security procedures and
incident response plans.
- Train school
personnel in conflict resolution, problem solving, drug
prevention, crisis intervention cultural sensitivity, classroom
management and counseling skills.
- Make sure
staff can recognize trouble signs and identify potentially
violent students.
- Encourage
students to talk about concerns about activities in their
school, home and neighborhood. Carefully listen to what they
say.
- If a student
makes a threat of violence, take him or her seriously. Address
the problem immediately and act to prevent a potential conflict.
- When something
violent and frightening happens at school or in the
neighborhood, take time to talk about it. Discuss the
consequences and get students to think about what other choices,
besides violence, might have been available. Get help from
trained counselors, if necessary.
- Work with
students, parents, law enforcement, local government, and
community-based groups to develop community-wide crime
prevention efforts.
Community partners
- Law
enforcement can report on the type of crimes in the surrounding
community and suggest ways to make schools safer.
- Have police or
organized groups of adults patrol routes students take to and
from school.
-
Community-based groups, church organizations, and other service
groups can provide counseling, extended learning programs,
before and after school activities and other community crime
prevention programs.
- State and
local governments can develop model school safety plans and
provide funding for schools to implement the programs.
- Local
businesses can provide apprenticeship programs, participate in
adopt-a-school programs or serve as mentors to area students.
- Colleges and
universities can offer conflict management courses to teachers
or assist school officials in implementing violence prevention
curricula.
When crime drugs and violence spill over from the streets into
the schools, providing a safe learning environment becomes
increasingly difficult.
Many students must travel through gang turf or groups of drug
dealers. More students are carrying weapons for protection;
gunfights replace fistfights.
Violence has become an acceptable way to settle conflicts. This kind
of an environment makes it difficult for teachers to teach and
children to learn.
Information on the NYSP website is presented as a community
service. Reproductions of information or images taken from the NYSP
website must be used for the sole purpose of supplying information
as a non-reimbursable, community service.
Reprint from
http://www.troopers.state.ny.us website. Visit their website for
many hints and tips for safety and protection.

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