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University of Nebraska at Omaha

Special Topics, General

Series

Violence prevention

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

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The Progress Of Education Reform 1999-2001: Youth Violence, Suzanne Weiss Jul 1999

The Progress Of Education Reform 1999-2001: Youth Violence, Suzanne Weiss

Special Topics, General

Three strategies to stem the tide of youth violence: Prenatal and infant care; small schools; and service-learning.


Service-Learning: An Education Strategy For Preventing School Violence, Carol Kinsley Jan 1999

Service-Learning: An Education Strategy For Preventing School Violence, Carol Kinsley

Special Topics, General

Recent headlines provide ample testimony of dramatic, heart-stopping incidents of youth violence - at every socioeconomic level, in every age group, and across rural, suburban and urban areas. What were once seen as isolated outbursts have multiplied in such a way that they no longer can be thought of as random incidents.

Many factors underlie violent behavior in schools. Easy access to guns, violent movies and video games, poor and even destructive parenting, social upheaval in schools, minority status and, not least, violence in the home arc all potential "enablers" of violent behavior on the part of students. But these …


"Promoting Peace And Preventing Violence" Lions-Quest Skills For Action, Rich Cairn Oct 1995

"Promoting Peace And Preventing Violence" Lions-Quest Skills For Action, Rich Cairn

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Students at Bishop Ford Catholic Central High School in Brooklyn, New York have completed several violence-prevention service projects as part of their participation in the Skills for Action program. Seniors facilitated eight-week sessions to orient freshmen, including conflict resolution and role playing.


Violence, Youth And A Way Out, John A. Calhoun Sep 1988

Violence, Youth And A Way Out, John A. Calhoun

Special Topics, General

It is a conviction shared by those who care for young people and their families that violence among youth has reached intolerable levels and that a response is demanded. The homicide statistics are chilling: In 1986, four to five people under age 18 were murdered per day, 10 percent more than in 1985. Equally chilling, three to four people under 18 were arrested for murder every day, a seven percent increase over 1985.