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         At Risk Students:     more books (100)
  1. Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The At-Risk Student in the Open-Door College by John E. Roueche, Suanne D. Roueche, 1997-07
  2. Adapting Instruction for Mainstreamed and At-Risk Students by Judy W. Wood, 1992-01
  3. Teaching Mainstreamed, Diverse, and At-Risk Students in the General Education Classroom by Sharon Vaughn, Candace S. Bos, et all 1996-09-23
  4. Teaching Advanced Skills to At-Risk Students: Views from Research and Practice (Jossey Bass Education Series) by Barbara Means, Carol Chelemer, 1991-11
  5. At-Risk Students: Feeling Their Pain, Understanding Their Plight, Accepting Their Defense Ploys by Bill Page, 2006-01-15
  6. Direction instruction Reading Programs: Examining Effectiveness for at-risk Students in Urban Settings: A Special Issue of the journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk
  7. Programs for At-Risk Students (Essential Tools for Educators series) by Rita G. O'Sullivan, Cheryl V. Tennant, 1993-03-02
  8. I Am Somebody: College Knowledge for at Risk Students, 16th Edition by Anna Leider, 2000-09
  9. Multisensory Structured Metacognitive Instruction: An Approach to Teaching a Foreign Language to At-Risk Students by Elke Schneider, 1999-08
  10. Opening Doors to the Future (Support Group for At-Risk Students) by Anna Jean Gaissert, 1999
  11. AT-RISK STUDENTS AND THINKING: PERSPECTIVES FROM RESEARCH by Barbara Z. (editor) Presseisen, 1988
  12. How to Rescue At-Risk Students/Book and Cassettes by Sharon Briggs, Ginny Sorrell, 1991-09
  13. MAKING THE SYSTEM WORK FOR THE AT-RISK STUDENT(1).: An article from: Social Policy Journal of New Zealand by Susan Baragwanath, 1998-12-01
  14. Teaching At-Risk Student in the K-4 Classroom: Language, Literacy, Learning (Bill Harp Professional Teachers Library)

41. At-Risk Students Who Find Success
There is a small percentage of teenagers who dropout of high school and becomeselfmade millionaires. Does it not make sense that these people hold the
http://www.motivation-tools.com/youth/at-risk_who_succeed.htm
Motivation Tool Chest motivation-tools.com Table of Contents
The "Youth Motivation" website is available for download in PDF format.
Motivation Posters
There is a small percentage of teenagers who dropout of high school and become self-made millionaires. HOW and WHY, you may ask? These achievers used self-motivated projects with interactive learning methods to develop valuable skills. Does it not make sense that these people hold the secret to achievement that other students could follow? Why does society keep pushing failed policies on failing students? Education leaders' wants society to believe that students in passive learning environments are the only one’s who find success. They want everyone to believe that success personalities are based on classroom compatibility. Super achievers are interactive learners who take on projects that are in harmony with their natural talent. Their projects are based on dreams, goals and/or creative ideas. Finding a way to develop self-inspired ideas, and get it right, is a powerful motivating drive. Interactive learning is the power behind people who have above average income. The sequence is as follows:
  • The first step is to have a burning idea/ goal that motivates . This will be based on natural talent, if free of outside pressure.
  • 42. The Risk Center - Your Online Resource For Risk Management
    An information resource for professionals and students in the home building insurance and construction industries. Sponsored by DBH Resources.
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    DBH Resources is proud to present TheRiskCenter.com, an information resource that offers training and continuing education to risk management professionals and students in the home building insurance and construction industries. The site features Insurance News and Construction News up-to-the-minute coverage to keep you informed on the very latest. In addition, our Discussion Groups give you the opportunity to post questions or comments and receive feedback on a vast array of issues concerning your profession.
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    43. Violence Among Middle School And High School Students
    Analysis and Implications for Prevention. Violent incidents among atrisk middle school and high school students, which often escalate from seemingly trivial events.
    http://www.ncjrs.org/txtfiles/166363.txt
    TITLE: Violence Among Middle School and High School Students: Analysis and Implications for Prevention. AUTHOR: Daniel Lockwood, Ph.D. SUBJECT: Juvenile violence Series: NIJ Published: October 1997 17 pages 35,571 bytes Figures, charts, forms, and tables are not included in this ASCII plain-text file. To view this document in its entirety, download the Adobe Acrobat graphic file available from this Web site or order a print copy from NCJRS at 800-851-3420. U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs National Institute of Justice Research in Brief Jeremy Travis, Director October 1997 Issues and Findings Discussed in this Brief: Violent incidents among at-risk middle school and high school students, which often escalate from seemingly trivial events. The type and frequency of these incidents are identified in this study, but the major focus is on such factors as the relationship among the antagonists; the sequence of events in the confrontation, including the "opening moves"; and the goals and justifications cited by the students. The information was drawn from indepth interviews with 110 students who attend public schools in which the level of violence is high. Key issues: o Data from assault studies reveal that arguments resulting in violence are a considerable problem for American youths, as both victims and aggressors. The problem is growing, as juveniles' risk of victimization has risen since the mid-1980s, especially among African-Americans. For aggravated assault, the juvenile arrest rate is projected to rise. o There are few ethnographic studies of violence among middle and high school students, but studies of adult offenders reveal concepts that may apply to the analysis of these students' behavior. o The study design was chosen specifically for its value in generating information that can be used to create or enhance violence prevention programs. This information could be incorporated into the curriculums of school-based conflict resolution programs. Key findings: o In the largest proportion of violent incidents, the "opening move" involved a relatively minor affront but escalated from there. Few opening moves were predatory. o The largest number of incidents took place among young people who knew each other, and the school or the home was the place where most incidents began. o The most common goal was retribution, and the justifications and excuses offered indicated this stemmed not from an absence of values but from a well-developed value system in which violence is acceptable. o The findings regarding location, duration, relationship of disputants, and the roles of peers and adults can be used in designing and improving violence prevention programs. The patterns of events created by the researchers can indicate areas for intervention, with a focus on the opening moves. o In adopting the findings to violence prevention programs, reducing the frequency of opening moves may be the most promising approach. Changing the underlying value system is more difficult, although it is central to reducing violence. Target audience: Teachers and other educational staff; staff of youth agencies; public health, juvenile justice, and criminal justice officials and practitioners; researchers and practitioners in conflict resolution and related areas; and others concerned with violence prevention. Violence Among Middle School and High School Students: Analysis and Implications for Prevention by Daniel Lockwood, Ph.D. Adolescent violence is partly attributable to escalating sequences of events that culminate in outcomes unintended by the participants. Although the young people who engage in violence do not intend the outcome, they nevertheless suffer the consequenceseither the harm that comes from being victimized or the punishment that comes from being the aggressor. This type of violence is extensive. An estimated 16 percent of all high school students in this country have been in one or more physical fights on school property in the course of a year.[1] Victimization rates for simple assault are highest among young people ages 12 to 19.[2] The problem is increasing, because while some types of violent crime are declining, the risk of being a victim of this type of crime has risen since the mid-1980s among juveniles ages 12 to 17. The same is true with the more serious offense of aggravated assault; juvenile arrests for this offense are projected to rise.[3] Aggravated assault and even homicide, which include young people as victims and offenders, often result from events similar to those triggering less serious offensestransactions over seemingly trivial matters, occurring between people who know each other. This study of violent incidents among middle and high school students focused not only on the types and frequency of these incidents but also on their dynamicsthe locations, the "opening moves," the relationship between disputants, the goals and justifications of the aggressor, the role of third parties, and other factors. The violent incidents were analyzed to create general models of the sequence or pattern of events in the interactions among disputants. The analysis confirmed that the opening moves involved such actions as minor slights and teasing, and the incidents took place largely among young people who knew each other. What is perhaps most troubling is the finding that the students' violent behavior did not stem from lack of values. Rather, it was grounded in a well-developed set of values that holds such behavior to be a justifiable, commonsense way to achieve certain goals. Information about the typical steps that culminate in violent incidents, the rationales for those incidents, the most common locations where the incidents take place, and how the disputants and others are related can be useful in designing effective prevention programs aimed at developing nonviolent responses. In fact, the analysis was conducted with the express purpose of generating information that can be used to take preventive action. Knowing where in the sequence of events leading to a violent incident a certain action takes place can aid in identifying points for intervention. If such intervention occurs during the early, opening moves, it might be possible to prevent escalation to more serious violence. Changing the cultural norms or values that justify these violent incidents may be a more difficult task. The students, their schools, and their neighborhoods The study was based on the experiences of middle school and high school students. The middle school is in an economically disadvantaged African- American section of a large Southern city. The neighborhood this middle school serves, which includes a public housing complex, has experienced some of the highest rates of reported violent crime in the country. The high school is an "alternative school" attended by children who have committed serious violations of school rules, largely those involving illegal drugs, possession of handguns, or fighting. Many students in this high school, which is located in a large city in the southern part of the Midwest, come from high-crime areas, including public housing communities. Since the schools were selected for having high rates of violence, the students in the study were assumed to stand a greater chance of becoming involved with violence. For that reason, their involvement cannot be said to reflect the behavior of the general student bodies of middle schools and high schools. The study's perspective The interviews were open-ended, with the students encouraged to speak at length about the violent incidents in which they had been involved. A total of 250 "incidents," most taking place within the past year, came to light in the interviews. The conversations explored the dynamics of the incidents from the perspective of the young people and were concerned with behavior, emotions, values, and attitudes at different steps of the violent encounter. The researchers examined such factors as goals, excuses, and justifications for the incidents. This approach stemmed from the researchers' "social interactionist" perspective, which explains behavior through the analysis of interaction among people. Thus, from this perspective force or violence is viewed as rational behavior to the extent it is designed to effect change in the target of the violence.[4] There has been little research in the nature of violent interactions among middle and high school students, especially qualitative ethnographic studies conducted from a social interactionist perspective. This type of research requires considerable investments in time and other resources, as well as the skills of trained interviewers.[5] However, such studies have been conducted among adults, and they disclose key information about the dynamics of the violent events. These studies, which concerned dispute- related violence and were based on interviews with adult convicted offenders, reveal salient themes: o A "character contest" may develop in which neither party will back down. The disputants then create a "working agreement" that the situation calls for violence.[6] o A key step in the transaction is often an event that the offender interprets as an offense requiring saving face. o Offenders often make a rational choice to be violent, a choice with generally one of three goals: to gain compliance, to restore justice, or to assert and defend identities.[7] These themes may be relevant to the study of juveniles and suggest areas for preventive intervention. Indeed, the intent of the present study is to contribute knowledge that can be used to prevent violence among young people. School- based conflict resolution programs, which have increased greatly in recent years, may be especially appropriate mechanisms for such intervention.[8] Many of them follow interactive "social problem solving" or "social skills" models, whose curriculums would be suitable to integrating the findings of studies that use the concepts analyzed here. These curriculums might be enhanced by incorporating into their simulations, role playing, and psychodramas (structured human relations exercises) the details of incident locations, the relationships among participants, opening moves, the patterns and sequences of events, and the goals and justifications cited for acting violentlyall of which are treated in this study. Prevention programs might focus on the specific events or "moves" leading up to a violent incident and intervene at that point to modify behavior or take other action. Characteristics of the incidents Frequency and seriousness. Violence was defined in this study as "an act carried out with the intention, or perceived intention, of physically injuring another person."[9] Each of the 250 incidents included at least one physical indicator of force or violence and included such behaviors as throwing something at the other person; pushing, grabbing, or shoving; slapping, kicking, hitting with a fist; hitting with an object; threatening with a gun or knife; or using a gun or knife. These behaviors constitute a scale of least serious to most serious. Kicking, biting, or hitting with the fist was the most frequent violent incident, occurring in two-thirds of the cases. (See exhibit 1.) Use of a knife occurred least frequently (in 2 percent of the incidents). The most serious behavior on the scale, using a gun, occurred 5 percent of the time. None of the incidents involving guns took place in school. Half the gun incidents were robberies in which respondents were victims or offenders, and in most of the rest the guns were brandished for self- defense. Gender differences. The involvement of girls was more extensive than might be expected. The average number of incidents per student was about the same for the 40 girls in the study as it was for the 70 boys. While boys tended to fight mainly with other boys, girls were involved in almost as many fights with boys as with other girls. Moreover, girls were the offenders in all incidents in which knives were used. Most of these knife incidents began in school. Relationships of antagonists. The largest number of incidents took place among people who knew each other. More than half (58 percent) were among acquaintances, 16 percent among friends, and 15 percent among family members (mostly siblings or cousins). Only 11 percent were among strangers. Criminal circumstances. While 26 incidents occurred during a crime, only 3 of these were related to illegal drugs. The others were mostly robberies and thefts, incidents that placed young people at risk of serious injury, since guns often played a role. Role of adults. The adults in charge of these young people found out about only half the incidents. Of the other half, teachers, mothers, and police officers became involved at some point in the sequence of events. Police were on the scene in 18 percent of the violent transactions, generally after the final combat. Role of peers. Made up largely of friends and relatives, third parties were present in about 60 percent of the incidents. Their most common role was to encourage violence or to join in fights out of loyalty to a combatant. In only nine incidents did they attempt to mediate disputes. Duration of incidents. The large majority of the incidents were short lived. While 70 percent lasted 15 minutes or less from the initial provocation to the final combat, only 20 percent took an hour or longer. Commitment to violence. "Working agreements" similar to those revealed in the studies of adults' dispute-related violence were common. These are agreements in which invitations or challenges to fight are offered and then accepted. They preceded actual combat in almost two-thirds (62 percent) of the incidents. Feelings of disputants. Fear was infrequently felt among the students, occurring in only 14 percent of the incidents. Not surprisingly, most of the incidents that provoked fear were the ones involving guns. Anger was more common than fear, with students in 62 percent of the incidents saying they experienced it. However, anger was seldom offered as an excuse for engaging in violence. The "opening moves" The "opening move" is the action of the student, the student antagonist, or third party that initiates the violent incident.[10] Analysis of the sequence of events constituting the incidents revealed common patterns"scripts" or specific sequences of events that followed these opening moves. Types. Few opening moves involved robbery or theft. Many more involved unprovoked offensive touching. (The types, number, and percentage of the moves are presented in exhibit 2.) In very few scripts (less than 10 percent) did any move following the opening move aim at avoiding violence, such as an attempt to take evasive action or influence this attempt. In the large majority of incidents (about 70 percent), the students described the antagonist not themselvesas the one making the opening move. Locations. About three-quarters of the violent incidents began in school or at home. (Exhibit 3 shows where the incidents began.) Of the school- based incidents, about half took place in school itself, and of these, about half occurred in the classroom. Gyms and other institutional recreation areassites supervised by adultswere often the locus of violent conflict in addition to classrooms. The structured activities that brought young people together in these settings facilitated confrontations. Goals and values The students cited these as the most frequent aims of their violent behavior: o Retributionpunishing the antagonist for something he or she did (40 percent of all goals). o Complianceconvincing the antagonist to desist from an offensive course of action (22 percent). o Defense of one's self or others (21 percent). o Promotion of one's imageby saving face, defending one's honor, or enhancing or maintaining one's reputation (8 percent). Rationalizing violence The explanations the students offered for the violent-incident behavior confirm their belief that this type of behavior is acceptable. (Exhibit 4 presents the type, number, and percentage of these reasons.) Explanations categorized as "justifications" are those in which the young people accepted responsibility for their violent actions but denied the actions were wrong. The vast majority (84 percent of the accounts) fell into this category. The others were categorized as "excuses," or explanations in which the young people admitted the act was wrong but denied responsibility. Justifications. The primary themes that justified violence in the eyes of these young people corroborate the findings about rational goals. The students generally fought to retaliate, to defend themselves, or to resist the antagonist's demands. Their actions were bolstered by a strong belief system, evident in these justifications, which served to neutralize any guilt. The students who acted violently usually said the victim had done something to deserve harm. This expression of cultural values, seen in such accounts, is the primary justification for violence. (Examples from the interviews are presented in "Middle School Students' Justifications for ViolenceFrom the Interviews.") Excuses. Examples of this type of rationale are students' contentions that their free will was impaired by anger, that they were pushed into the incident by aggressors, or that they did not mean to do it. That the percentage of excuses was small is further evidence that the young people in this study viewed violence as a rational, socially acceptable response. Possibilities for preventive intervention Markers for intervention. There are several ways in which the study findings could be applied to the design of programs to counter violence. Analysis of the gender of disputants indicated that girls matched boys in number of violent incidents, and this suggests that programs should focus on them as well. Supervising adultsspecifically teachers, mothers, and police officersare prime candidates for training in conflict resolution, since the study revealed that at some point they may be called in to manage the confrontations. The study also revealed that the violent incidents are very brief. This allows only a limited amount of time for intervention, and because at the start of the incident peers, teachers, and parents are the third parties most likely to be on the scene, they would be the best mediators. The findings regarding location of violent incidents also reveal areas for intervention. The great majority occur at school or at home, highlighting the importance of school staff and parents in violence prevention. Of school locations, the classroom was the site of the largest proportion of incidents, raising the possibility of adopting programs in how to handle relationships in the classroom. The classroom teacher would be the likely candidate to direct these programs. In general, conflict tends to erupt in settings like schools, indicating that structured settings in which adolescents are placed are likely sites for nonviolence programs. Preventing opening moves from escalating. The social interactionist perspective is a useful basis for developing policies, programs, and practices to address school-based violence prevention. The findings of this study indicate that such initiatives should focus on specific aspects of the transactions, identified here, that precede violent behavior. (See "The Sequence of EventsA Model.") The aim of such early intervention would be to prevent more serious incidents. Reducing the occurrence of opening moves appears to be the most promising approach to preventing escalation to violence. Social skill curriculums could incorporate the development of nonviolent responses to behavior that otherwise might follow the same route. Some of the typical opening moves identified in this study could be adopted in the role playing that is part of these curriculums. One of the most frequent opening moves is offensive touching. The design of school-based violence prevention programs could include policies and practices that strongly discourage this type of behavior, however minor some of its expressions may appear. A well-defined system of rules and discipline could go far to prevent bullies and others who persecute children in schools from engaging in such behavior. All types of offensive touchingthrowing something at someone, or pushing, grabbing, shoving, slapping, kicking, or hitting someoneshould be considered by everyone in the school to be very serious, wrongful behavior. The study findings reveal many instances in which these opening moves escalate to fierce combats, suggesting that efforts to reduce this behavior will reduce serious violent incidents. Where the opening move involves possessions or a possessory interestbehavior seen as often as offensive touchingyoung people could be taught the social skills needed to manage conflicts arising from these situations. And given the many violent incidents that begin with teasing and rough play, another promising strategy is to promote programs to encourage civic values that discourage ridicule ("put downs"), teasing, and rough play in school. Specific prevention strategies can be matched to other categories in the typology of opening moves. Although insults and backbiting, for example, are minor affronts, they can be viewed as high-risk behaviors and dealt with as part of the strategy. Peer mediators, who today are often a familiar presence in school, can also receive training to defuse events triggered by the opening moves. Tackling the values issue A preference for violent retaliation over other forms of redress, a strong belief in punishment, and a sensitivity to perceived injustice and mistreatment are core values at the heart of these students' violent responses. Students adopt the styles of parents, teachers, and other adults around them, and students' norms will not change unless these models change. Changing these norms may be very difficult. It may be easier to decrease the frequency of the moves, especially the opening moves, in the violent transaction that arises from these values, than to change the values themselves. Nonetheless, a comprehensive violence prevention program could also include activities aimed at changing the values and attitudes that justify violence. If any belief warrants change, it is retribution, as this was the primary justification for violence. It was the goal in a large proportion (40 percent) of the incidents in which students rationally decided to act violently. Analysis of justifications and excuses also showed the prominence of retribution in neutralizing guilt the violent act was seen as a logical response to a perceived harm and therefore judged acceptable by the assailant. This suggests that changing beliefs and attitudes about the acceptability of punishment and violent retribution is central to reducing violent conflict. One way schools can do this is by adopting a "civic values" approach, establishing and highlighting rules against retributive punishment of students by students. Small-group interactive sessions could also role play the destructive consequences of personal retributive justice. While belief in retribution is deeply embedded in youth culture, and challenges to the value of physical punishment will be resisted, changing young people's belief in retaliation deserves serious consideration as an aim of school- based programs. Through role playing and simulations, young people can learn nonviolent means of persuasion. These exercises can be created from the typical sequences or patterns of events brought to light here. Notes 1. Kann, Laura, et al., "Youth Risk Behavior SurveillanceUnited States, 1993," CDC Surveillance Summaries. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 44 No. SS-1, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, March 24, 1995:29. 2. Taylor, Bruce M., Changes in Criminal Victimization, 1994-95, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, April 1997:3. 3. Snyder, Howard N., and Melissa Sickmund, Juvenile Offenders and Victims: A Focus on Violence, Pittsburgh: National Center for Juvenile Justice, 1995. Their estimates of the projected increase in juvenile arrests for aggravated assault range from 21 percent to 129 percent in the next 15 years. 4. For this theoretical framework see Tedeschi, James T., and Richard B. Felson, Violence, Aggression, and Coercive Actions, Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association, 1994. 5. Recent reviews of the literature on adolescent violence have called for such studies. See American Psychological Association, Violence and Youth, Washington, D.C., 1993; Reiss, Albert J., and Jeffrey A. Roth, Understanding and Preventing Violence, Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1993. 6. Luckenbill, David F., "Criminal Homicide as a Situated Transaction," Social Problems 25 (1977):176-86. 7. Tedeschi and Felson, Violence, Aggression, and Coercive Actions. 8. Some find these programs promising. See Elliott, Delbert S., Youth Violence: An Overview (Boulder, Colorado: The Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence, 1994); Tolan, Patrick and Nancy Guerra, What Works in Reducing Adolescent Violence: An Empirical Review of the Field (Boulder, Colorado: The Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence, 1994). Others disagree. See Webster, Daniel, "The Unconvincing Case for School-Based Conflict Resolution Programs for Adolescents," Health Affairs 12 (1993):126-141. 9. The definition, borrowed from Richard J. Gelles, was operationalized by using his widely adopted "Conflict Tactics Technique Scale" (Gelles, Richard J., Family Violence, Beverly Hills, California: Sage Publications, 1979). 10. For a paper devoted exclusively to these opening moves, see Lockwood, Daniel, "The Opening Move in Violent Interactions Among Selected African-American Middle School Students," Challenge 7 (1996):25-41. Study Design and Method The information about violent incidents among students in middle school and high school was based on interviews conducted with 70 boys and 40 girls who attended public schools in which the rate of violence was high. Of these 110 students, 58 were selected at random from a student body of about 750 at a middle school in an economically disadvantaged African-American section of a large Southern city. The neighborhood the school served, which included a public housing project, had some of the country's highest rates of reported violent crime. Another 52 students volunteered from an alternative school, a high school attended by students who had committed serious violations of school rules. This school is located in a large city in the southern part of the Midwest. Of the total number, 86 were African-American and 24 were white. Only students who received permission from their parents to participate were included in the study. The 110 interviews yielded 250 incidents, almost all of which (90 percent) occurred within 12 months of the interview and half within 6 months. The structure of the interviews, most of which lasted about an hour, was open-ended, with respondents encouraged to speak at length about violent incidents in which they had been involved. To permit quantitative analysis, the content of the interviews was converted to a database, and the violent incident became the unit of analysis. Qualitative analysis was conducted as well from a selection of interview excerpts and the ideas emerging from them.* In addition, the incidents were analyzed to reveal the sequence of events they shared in common, with each "move" (or event) in the overall transaction identified and the sequences then grouped to reveal typical patterns. *This type of qualitative analysis was based on the use of QSR NUD.IST software. Middle School Students' Justifications for ViolenceFrom the Interviews Students rationalized their violent behavior in a variety of ways. Student 2: He took the cards out of my hand and threw them at me and then he threw a shoe at me and then I hit him back. Student 21: I felt good because I felt he got what he deserved because he hit me in the head. Student 14: She tried to jump my cousin. She say something about my cousin stole her ring or something, and then my cousin say, "How I'm going to steal your ring?" I kept on saying in my mind if she slaps my cousin, I'm going over there. She slapped my cousin and calling all kinds of names. I said, "All right there, don't call me names." I walked over there and she hit me and she slapped my cousin, so I pushed her out. Student 10: I had a conflict with a girl. She wanted to steal from me. I don't like nobody to steal from me. You want something from me, you ask me for it. If I got it, I'll give it to you. If I can't give it to you I'll tell you I can't give it to you `cause it might not be mine. But she wanted to steal from me, so we got into a big argument. The Sequence of EventsA Model Each event in each violent incident was categorized by type, and the events were analyzed to reveal sequences or patterns that can serve as general models of the students' interactions. An example of one common pattern is presented here (the general model is illustrated schematically in exhibit 5).* These patterns could be useful as sources of role- playing scenarios in social skill exercises for students. This example, drawn from the interview transcripts, shows that the presence of third parties can escalate the conflict. Over the summer this girl fell off her bike and we were laughing, and then for some reason, she started not liking us. Me and my cousin and her got to cussing. She lived up the street and she was walking up the street and started to say something to us and we started whistling and stuff. She just be trying to make me come there and fight her but I ain't never fight her. She would stand out there in the street and say, "What's up? Wanna come out here and do something? Come on." I would just go in the house. I would be outside and I wouldn't say nothing to her and she would just say like "A. got crabs," and stuff, just say something to me for no reason . . . I guess she had got mad. They got a go-cart and they were riding up and down the street, and then she made faces . . . She stopped in our driveway and say, "Y'all want to do something?" Her and my cousin begin to fight and my grandmother came out there and broke it up and she went back to her house and got her daddy, and then my grandma and her dad started in on it. He was saying stuff like he wasn't going to talk. He used guns and stuff. I was scared because when we were outside he might shoot the house up. Him and my grandma was out there fussing, and the police they be walking around on the streets and stuff, and my Mama had told them to go down there because he said he would use guns and stuff . . . They went up there and told him, "Don't be saying stuff like that around children and stuff." He said they should learn to sit down and talk things out. *Space limitations prohibit presentation of all the sequence patterns that emerged from the analysis. They are reported in a forthcoming book by the researcher (tentatively titled Violent Interactions Among Middle and High School Students). Daniel Lockwood, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Savannah State University. The research for this study was supported by NIJ grant 94-IJ-CX-0062. Findings and conclusions of the research reported here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice. The National Institute of Justice is a component of the Office of Justice Programs, which also includes the Bureau of Justice Assistance, the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, and the Office for Victims of Crime. NCJ 166363 Related Publications Listed below are selected free publications from the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) and the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) related to adolescent violence and violence prevention. These publications can be obtained from the National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS), telephone 800-851-3420, e-mail askncjrs@ncjrs.org, or write NCJRS, P.O. Box 6000, Rockville, MD 20849-6000. NIJ Publications DeJong, William Building the Peace: The Resolving Conflict Creatively Program (RCCP) NIJ Program Focus, 1994 NCJ 149549 Partnerships Against Violence Network (PAVNET) Online Users Guide NIJ Research in Brief, 1995 NCJ 152057 Roth, Jeffrey A. Understanding and Preventing Violence NIJ Research in Brief, 1994 NCJ 145645 OJJDP Publications Conflict Resolution Education: A Guide to Implementing Programs in Schools, Youth- Serving Organizations, and Community and Juvenile Justice Settings OJJDP Program Report, 1996 NCJ 160935 Epidemiology of Serious Violence OJJDP Juvenile Justice Bulletin, 1997 NCJ 165152 Reducing Youth Gun Violence: An Overview of Programs and Initiatives OJJDP Research Report, 1996 NCJ 154303 Snyder, Howard N., and Melissa Sickmund Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 1997 Update on Violence OJJDP Statistics Summary, 1997 NCJ 165703 The Youngest Delinquents: Offenders Under Age 15 OJJDP Juvenile Justice Bulletin, 1997 NCJ 165256 Quick Access to NIJ Publication News For news about NIJ's most recent publications, including solicitations for grant applications, subscribe to JUSTINFO, the bimonthly newsletter sent to you via e-mail. Here's how: o Send an e-mail to listproc@ncjrs.org o Leave the subject line blank o Type subscribe justinfo your name (e.g., subscribe justinfo Jane Doe) in the body of the message Or check out the "What's New" section at the Justice Information Center home page: http://www.ncjrs.org

    44. Learning Disabilities OnLine: LD In-Depth: : Preventing Antisocial Behavior In D
    Information on learning disabilities, attention deficit disorders, special education, parenting, and teaching.
    http://www.ldonline.org/ld_indepth/add_adhd/ael_behavior.html
    The leading Web site on learning disabilities
    for parents, teachers, and other professionals Home Page FAQs About LD IDEA 2004 Update What's New ... LD OnLine Store
    Preventing Antisocial Behavior in Disabled and At-Risk Students
    Appalachia Educational Laboratory
    (opens in a new window)

    Section I
    Risk and Antisocial Behavior
    Section II
    Prevention and Policy Practice
    The public expects schools to socialize children as well as to educate them.1 In fact, socialization, rather than academics, is why many parents choose public education over private or home school. However, public criticism of schools' performance in both roles has increased in recent years. The public wants schools to be responsible not only for improving achievement but also for curbing disruptive, violent, and antisocial behavior. As a result, support is growing for "zero tolerance" discipline policies and alternative school placement for disruptive students. Discussions about discipline have especially focused on special education students. Some teachers and parents are against the inclusion of potentially disruptive students in regular education classrooms and schools. They want to change laws and policies that discourage exclusion, suspension, and expulsion of such students. However, for children suffering from disabilities and other risk factors like poverty, crime, and abuse, traditional discipline methods and policies may exacerbate rather than remedy problem behavior.2

    45. High Risk Students
    http//www.nationalhomeless.org/edchild.html. * ERIC Digest Education Reformand students at risk (1997) http//www.ericfacility.net/ericdigests/ed405642.
    http://www.eduref.org/cgi-bin/print.cgi/Resources/Specific_Populations/High_Risk
    Printer friendly text Home Specific Populations
    High Risk Students
    Archived Responses Internet Sites Organizations
    Archived Responses: * What factors influence students to drop out of school?
    http://eduref.org/cgi-bin/printresponses.cgi/Virtual/Qa/archives/ Specific_Populations/High_Risk_Students/dropout.html

    Internet Sites: * Addressing the Needs of Youth with Disabilities in the Juvenile Justice System: The Status of Evidence-Based Research (May 2003)
    "This report summarizes and assesses the state of knowledge about children and youth with disabilities who are at risk of delinquency and involvement in, or who have already entered, the juvenile justice system."
    http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/publications/juvenile.html
    * At-Risk Youth
    Research and resources pertaining to the education of at-risk youth. Provided by the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Vocational and Adult Education (OVAE).
    http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ovae/pi/hs/atrisk.html?exp=0
    * Public Alternative Schools and Programs for Students At Risk of Education Failure: 2000-01
    The focus of the study is on alternative schools and programs that serve students who are at risk of educational failure, as indicated by poor grades, truancy, disruptive behavior, suspension, pregnancy, or similar factors associated with early withdrawal from school.

    46. HTML REDIRECT
    The Master of Science program in mathematics is open for students interested in mathematical methods in risk and environmental modelling. Find information about the program and required courses.
    http://ssor.twi.tudelft.nl/~risk/

    47. High Risk Students
    Public Alternative Schools and Programs for students At risk of Education Failure200001 ERIC Digest - Education Reform and students at risk (1997)
    http://www.eduref.org/Resources/Specific_Populations/High_Risk_Students.html
    Home Specific Populations
    High Risk Students
    Archived Responses Internet Sites Organizations
    Archived Responses: * What factors influence students to drop out of school?
    http://eduref.org/cgi-bin/printresponses.cgi/Virtual/Qa/archives/ Specific_Populations/High_Risk_Students/dropout.html

    Internet Sites: * Addressing the Needs of Youth with Disabilities in the Juvenile Justice System: The Status of Evidence-Based Research (May 2003)
    "This report summarizes and assesses the state of knowledge about children and youth with disabilities who are at risk of delinquency and involvement in, or who have already entered, the juvenile justice system."
    http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/publications/juvenile.html
    * At-Risk Youth
    Research and resources pertaining to the education of at-risk youth. Provided by the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Vocational and Adult Education (OVAE).
    http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ovae/pi/hs/atrisk.html?exp=0
    * Public Alternative Schools and Programs for Students At Risk of Education Failure: 2000-01
    The focus of the study is on alternative schools and programs that serve students who are at risk of educational failure, as indicated by poor grades, truancy, disruptive behavior, suspension, pregnancy, or similar factors associated with early withdrawal from school.

    48. 4GL School Solutions + Educational Software To Manage Special Populations, Speci
    Provides solutions for managing special populations, including special education, English language learners, and atrisk students.
    http://www.4glschools.com/
    Home Solutions Customer Support News + Events ... Contact Us
    Gerry Altieri, special education technology coordinator, Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools
    FADSS (Florida Association of District School Superintendents) Fall Leadership Conference
    September 15-17 in Tampa, FL MO CASE (Council of Administrators of Special Education).
    September 25-27 in Osage Beach, MO NCERT (National Center for Education and Research) Annual Fall Conference
    September 28- October 1 in Ponte Verde, FL
    4GL School Solutions Names Vice President of Marketing
    4GL School Solutions Named Finalist For 2005 EdNET Hero Award Natrona County School District Chooses 4GL School Solutions To Provide Web-Based System For Managing Special Populations 4GL School Solutions Announces Letter of Intent to Acquire Tranquility Solutions Inc ... Site Map

    49. At-Risk Students. ERIC Digest
    Provides fulltext access to the ERIC Digest of this name.
    http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-928/risk.htm
    Site Links
    Home

    Search for ERIC Digests

    Privacy Policy

    Resources for Library Instruction
    ...
    Information Literacy Blog
    ERIC Identifier:
    Publication Date:
    Author:
    Donnelly, Margarita
    Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Educational Management Eugene OR.
    At-Risk Students. ERIC Digest Series Number 21.
    Nationally over 25 percent of the potential high school graduates drop out before graduation. In some major cities the rate is 40 percent. Higher standards in the public schools have affected millions of minority and disadvantaged students who are "at-risk." Educational reform has changed the rules before the system has had a chance to accommodate to an increasing number of students who are dropping out and becoming a burden to society. The identification of at-risk students and the development of programs to prevent their failure are necessary components of ducational reform. WHAT ARE THE CHARACTERISTICS OF AT-RISK STUDENTS? At-risk students are students who are not experiencing success in school and are potential dropouts. They are usually low academic achievers who exhibit low self-esteem. Disproportionate numbers of them are males and minorities. Generally they are from low socioeconomic status families. Students who are both low income and minority status are at higher risk; their parents may have low educational backgrounds and may not have high educational expectations for their children. At-risk students tend not to participate in school activities and have a minimal identification with the school. They have disciplinary and truancy problems that lead to credit problems. They exhibit impulsive behavior and their peer relationships are problematic. Family problems, drug addictions, pregnancies, and other problems prevent them from participating successfully in school. As they experience failure and fall behind their peers, school becomes a negative environment that reinforces their low self-esteem.

    50. Living Consciously
    A simple, practical process for personal growth, balance, healing, wellbeing, consciousness and motivation in mental, emotional, physical and spiritual aspects of life. Audio cassette course, seminars, employee training and wellness programs, special programs for at-risk students.
    http://www.livingconsciously.com

    51. Making Schools More Responsive To At-Risk Students. ERIC/CUE Digest
    Provides fulltext access to the ERIC Digest of this name.
    http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-9214/risk.htm
    Site Links
    Home

    Search for ERIC Digests

    Privacy Policy

    Resources for Library Instruction
    ...
    Information Literacy Blog
    ERIC Identifier:
    Publication Date:
    Author:
    Pallas, Aaron M.
    Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Urban Education New York NY.
    Making Schools More Responsive to At-Risk Students. ERIC/CUE Digest No. 60.
    Current approaches to educating at-risk students are the result of several shifts in thinking over the last 35 years. Now, a new way of defining at-risk students is needed for changes in school policy and practice to better meet these students' needs.
    DEFINING RISK
    Past Definitions. Earlier, risk was considered the result of only a single factor in a youth's life. Over time, policymakers and educators have identified different factors as the factor. Thirty years ago, the problems of school-aged children were attributed to cultural deprivation. As an antidote, children were provided with preschool compensatory enrichment that attempted to create a middle-class culture for them. Subsequently, educational deprivation was considered the primary cause of at-risk status. Resulting educational programs focused on K-12 education, and the lack of fit between poor, minority children and their schools.

    52. C R E S P A R
    Center for Research on the Education of students Placed At risk. Concerned with conducting research, intervention, evaluation, and dissemination projects to better ensure the academic success of children from groups that have historically been placed at risk for educational failure.
    http://crespar.law.howard.edu/
    Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed At Risk
    CRESPAR
    (The Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed At Risk) is a collaborative effort between Howard and Johns Hopkins Universities. This research and development center, which is funded by OERI ( the Office of Educational Research and Improvement in the U.S. Department of Education), has launched an important comprehensive school initiative designed to enhance the achievement, academic environment, and quality of life for students, teachers, and parents Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed At Risk
    Howard University/Crespar, Holy Cross Hall, 2900 Van Ness Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20008
    Phone: (202) 806-8484 Fax: (202) 806-8498 Email: crespar@crespar.law.howard.edu
    Howard University
    Created by: Jimmianne Warner

    53. CREDE - Center For Research On Education, Diversity And Excellence
    CREDE's mission is to assist the nation's diverse students at risk of educational failure to achieve academic excellence.
    http://www.crede.ucsc.edu/
    Welcome to crede.org, the new home of the CREDE website. We hope you find the information on our site useful. For inquiries on reprint permissions, please email us at crede@crede.org. All other inquiries can also be directed to crede@crede.org. CREDE NEWS
    The Five Standards have been implemented with an enormously diverse range of students for many decades now, from native Hawaiian and Alaskan students to native Zuni- and Spanish-speaking students to students in rural and inner city schools. In recent years, CREDE researchers have taken the Five Standards around the world, from Greenland to Taiwan to Iraq. Below are the standards translated into Arabic and Chinese.
    CALStore

    Just off the press from the Center for Applied Linguistics, Creating Access: Language and Academic Programs for Secondary School Newcomers CALStore
    If you are a teacher, teacher educator, administrator or researcher concerned with effective education for Native American students, CREDE's Native American Resources page might be of interest to you. On this page you will find referrals to articles, reports and other resources. Check out the page at: http://crede.ucsc.edu/products/profdev/na_bib.html
    CREDE reports are available on this web site and on the University of California's eScholarship Repository site. The site hosts more that 1,200 papers from some 90 groups from the nine UC campuses. CREDE publications and reports from CREDE's predecessor, National Center for Research on Cultural Diversity and Second Language Learning, can be downloaded

    54. Pathways To School Improvement
    Topics include curriculum, assessment, atrisk students, goals and standards, and instructional techniques.
    http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/pathwayg.htm

    info@ncrel.org

    information.

    55. Welcome To Kayla's Club
    A weekly afterschool program for gifted, at risk, and special needs students at a middle school outside Houston, TX. Children gain confidence and interpersonal skills.
    http://home.earthlink.net/~kaylasclub/
    Welcome To Kayla's Club!! Kayla's Club is a youth program
    that promotes respect for all living things
    pets...wildlife...nature...and people!
    We learn about animals and nature
    while improving our reading, writing,
    communication and interpersonal skills.
    Kayla's Club is sponsored by PetShare,
    a nonprofit 501(c)3 animal-assisted program
    and humane education organization.
    Kayla's Club offers a weekly after-school program
    for gifted, at-risk and special needs students at a middle school outside Houston, Texas. We learn a lot and have lots of fun!! Kayla is our mentor and comes to our meetings! Kayla shows us that animals have different cultures, too, just like people. She teaches us about animal needs, care, families and behavior. Kayla shows us positive, kind ways to train pets (and people!). She even helps us learn a "foreign" language Doggish!! A five-year-old Sheltie, Kayla once had a sad life. Covered with sores, mats and flea-infested fur, Kayla was rescued from a neglectful owner. She lived in two foster homes before she was adopted.

    56. ENC Online: Curriculum Resources: Browse: General Education> At Risk Students
    Atrisk students reaching and teaching them Print material Date 2004 Grade(s)K - 12 Cost $39.95 ENC 031156 This professional development book,
    http://www.enc.org/resources/browse/0,,0-1196-3756_1_0-0-0,00.shtm
    Skip Navigation You Are Here ENC Home Curriculum Resources Browse Search the Site More Options Don't lose access to ENC's web site! Beginning in August, goENC.com will showcase the best of ENC Online combined with useful new tools to save you time. Take action todaypurchase a school subscription through goENC.com Classroom Calendar Digital Dozen ENC Focus ... Ask ENC Explore online lesson plans, student activities, and teacher learning tools. Search Browse Frequently Asked Questions Resource of the Day ... About Curriculum Resources Read articles about inquiry, equity, and other key topics for educators and parents. Create your learning plan, read the standards, and find tips for getting grants.
    100 Records
    Sorted by Date Use these menus to limit browse results using specific criteria Grade: All Grade Levels Pre-K to 2 3 to 5 6 to 8 9 to 12 Post Sec. Media Type: All Media Types Only Web Sites Excluding Web Sites Cost: All Costs Low Cost (Less than $50) Free Return to Subject Tree Modify using Advanced Search
  • National Science Foundation Directorate for Education and Human Resources (EHR)
    ENC Digital Dozen Site
    Date: Grade(s): K - Post Sec.
  • 57. Alliance For Excellent Education
    Advocates for atrisk middle and high school students by promoting increased education funding and high school reform to help make every child a graduate.
    http://www.all4ed.org
    11/7/2005: Alliance to host "Toward a More Literate Nation: Raising the Bar for Reading and Writing Instruction in the High Schools ," a full-day symposium on adolescent literacy. More information is available on the events page Add your name to our mailing list to receive a copy of the Straight A's newsletter and future Alliance publications. The September 6 issue is now online. Straight A's Newsletter Volume 5 No. 16: September 6, 2005 In this issue: Americans on High Schools: "In Need of Improvement!": National Poll Finds American Public Feels More Urgency to Improve High Schools Than Elementary Education
    Striving Readers Applications Now Available: U.S. Department of Education to Make Approximately Eight Grants for Fiscal Year 2005

    Teacher Attrition: A Costly Loss to the Nation and to the United States: Alliance Analysis Finds That Teacher Vacancies Cost the United States Close to $5 Billion Annually

    Ready or Not, Here They Come: Half of College Freshmen Likely to Struggle with the Reading Demands of Their College Courses, According to Results from College Entrance Exam
    ... NATIONAL POLL RELEASE : On August 24, 2005, the Alliance for Excellent Education released the results of a national poll on the American public's opinion of high schools and their role in educating students for the challenges of the 21st century.

    58. At-Risk Students - American School Counselor Association
    Atrisk students. The Professional School Counselor and the Prevention andIntervention of Behaviors that Place students At risk
    http://www.schoolcounselor.org/content.asp?contentid=258

    59. College Mentors For Kids - Welcome
    Pairs high risk and underprivileged youth in Indiana with college students in a mentor capacity.
    http://www.cmfk.org/
    No child should go without health insurance... more Learn how to finance your/your child's education. Detailed Info ... Hoosier Healthwise
    Building Communities, one child at a time...
    College Mentors for Kids! Inc. is dedicated to cultivating ongoing one-on-one relationships between college and elementary aged students through shared experiences on the campus and in the community. For the duration of the school year, college students are paired with elementary students, creating a buddy pair. These buddy pairs meet in groups for weekly activities on the college campus. Through these activities, children explore new opportunities and begin to develop a larger sense of the world and their place in it. These activities focus on a multitude of valuable educational experiences and exposure to higher education, the arts, diverse cultures and community service.
    What can be found on cmfk.org?

    60. Position Statement: Dropout Prevention - American School Counselor Association
    The Professional School Counselor Dropout Prevention/studentsAt-risk There are probably as many definitions of the at-risk student as there are
    http://www.schoolcounselor.org/content.asp?contentid=204

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