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Get
Informed with Thomaston
Police Department
Safe Schools
When crime, drugs, and violence spill over from
the streets into the schools, providing a safe learning environment becomes
increasingly difficult. More students carry weapons for protection. Gunfights
replace fistfights. Many students must travel through drug dealer or gang
turf. Violence becomes an acceptable way to settle conflicts.
When this happens, children cannot learn and teachers
cannot teach.
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:
- Find out how crime threatens schools in your
community.
- Take actions to protect children.
- Promote nonviolent ways to manage conflict.
- How do these ideas translate into 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.
- Report crimes or suspicious activities to the
police, school authorities, or parents.
- Learn safe routes for traveling to and from
school, and 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 -- have poster contests against violence, hold anti-drug
rallies, volunteer to counsel peers. If there's no program, 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 whom they are with at all times.
- Help your children learn nonviolent ways to
handle frustration, anger, and conflict.
- Become involved in your child's school activities
-- PTA, field trips, and helping out in class or the lunch room.
- Work with other parents in your neighborhood
to start a McGruff House or other block parent program. A McGruff House
is a reliable source of help for children in emergency or frightening
situations. For information call 801-486-8691.
School Staff
- Evaluate your school's safety objectively. Set
targets for improvement.
- Develop consistent disciplinary policies, good
security procedures, and a response plan for emergencies.
- Train school personnel in conflict resolution,
problem solving, drug prevention, crisis intervention, cultural sensitivity,
classroom management, and counseling skills.
- Work with students, parents, law enforcement,
local governments, and community-based groups to develop wider-scope
crime prevention efforts.
Community Members
- Law enforcement can report on the type of crimes
in the surrounding community and suggest ways to make schools safer.
- Community-based groups, church organizations,
and other service groups can provide counseling, extended learning programs,
before- and after-school activities, school watches, and other community
crime prevention programs.
- Local businesses can provide apprenticeship
programs, participate in the 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 developing
violence prevention curricula.
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