CONTACT: Wendy Leopold at (847) 491-4897 or at [email protected]
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PARENT TRAINING IS KEY IN INNOVATIVE SCHOOL VIOLENCE PREVENTION PROGRAM

EVANSTON, Ill. --- An unusual anti-violence initiative at a suburban Chicago high school aims to decrease violence not only at the high school but in the communities in which the students reside as well. By introducing conflict resolution to the parents of students in addition to students, teachers and school staff, the Peaceable Schools Initiative goes beyond typical school anti-violence efforts such as peer mediation or the formation of student/faculty conflict resolution teams.

Developed by the Family Institute at Northwestern University for Lyons Township High School, the Peaceable Schools Initiative seeks at its broadest level to change the climate of the 3,000-student, west suburban high school. To do so, the school is introducing methods of anger and conflict management, providing alternatives to suspension, integrating conflict resolution into the academic curricula and establishing a community advisory board of parents, community members and high school faculty and staff

About a fifth of the Lyons Township's 250 teachers already have undergone conflict resolution training as have more than 30 suspended students and their families. Additional faculty, staff, students and parents are undergoing training this summer.

One of the hallmarks of Peaceable Schools is the involvement of parents. For the last two years, students suspended from LTHS for incidents of violence (such as fighting, threatening a teacher, or verbal abuse) have been given the opportunity to reduce their suspensions by half if they and their parents agree to undergo seven hours of conflict resolution training. At the end of the sessions, the students sign a document outlining what they have learned and how they will implement it to avoid fighting in the future.

"A big benefit for suspended students and parents who go through the training is the feeling that they're not being abandoned by the school," says Doug Breunlin, a family therapist at the Family Institute at Northwestern University and primary architect of the Peaceable Schools Initiative. Conflict styles often reflect what goes on in a family. Parents and children benefit by getting an identical message about resolving conflict and managing anger.

Although the research is not yet in on the success of the suspension alternative program, reports from parents and children are positive. "Parents feel good about the conflict resolution training because they feel more involved, more in control and better able to deal with the stress of raising adolescents," says Breunlin. Calling it training, he adds, is "a way to give parents and teens four sessions of what otherwise looks very much like family therapy."

Lyons Township High School Superintendent Dennis Kelly says that teachers -- "particularly younger ones who are still adding to their teacher bag of tricks" -- report that conflict resolution training improves their own ability to work with difficult students. And Kelly says the conflict resolution alternative boasts a near-perfect success rate. None of the approximately 30 students who went through the Family Institute training in the 1997-98 year received a repeat suspension.

The recognition that an alternative to suspension was needed arose when administrators at LTHS looked at the school's suspension rate and the impact that suspension has on students' school success. Not surprisingly, suspended students often have difficulty making up the work they miss, fall behind in their studies and feel less connected than ever to school.

"Society at large wants easy solutions and to somehow get rid of people who create problems. But 16- and 17-year-olds don't go away. What five or more days of suspension does is to make kids incredibly angry and disconnected and at greater risk to drop out," says Kelly.

Breunlin, a Lyons Township parent who in his practice as a therapist again and again runs up against the constraints of school systems when working with families with teens, agrees with Kelly. "Many schools send an unspoken message that they want 'troublemakers' out of the high school," says Breunlin. "When kids pick up on that message, they disengage from school, stop caring, and drop out by junior or senior year."

The idea of Peaceable Schools is to get all students -- not only students in the academic top 25 percent -- to feel invested in the life of their school. To help ensure that student problems or concerns are not overlooked, LTHS is developing an "advisory system" (rather like the old homeroom) in which the same faculty member serves as an advocate for a student over the course of the student's four years in the school.

Among other things, the weekly advisory period will be used to promote diversity awareness, social skills training, personal and academic goal-setting, and conflict resolution training. The advisory period, says Kelly, is the proverbial "port in the storm that offers another way to give support to our students."

A grant from the Community Memorial Foundation in LaGrange is being used to develop a student conflict resolution team to infuse the student body with a greater awareness of the goals of the Peaceable Schools Initiative. Summer workshops for teachers are planned to help teachers develop natural ways in which conflict resolution can be integrated in the academic curriculum. To do so, says Kelly, underscores the school's belief that conflict resolution principles are not an aside in the educational process.

If students are studying a piece of literature or discussing land treaties between Native Americans and the U.S. government, for example, there are ways to focus the dialogue on conflict and negotiation.

As a former high school principal, Kelly knows from experience that conflict is inevitable and that learning ways to resolve conflict are essential. "My hope is that in three years conflict resolution will be standard operating procedure at the high school," Kelly says. "There's no way you can get three people together -- let along 3,000 teenagers --and not have conflict."

The Peaceable Schools Initiative preceded the high school killings in Jonesboro and Springfield and are not a response to those tragic events. "The anti-violence message we're sending at LTHS is for all children, not for that potential loner that's carrying the high powered rifle. I may be cynical but I don't believe there are school programs that can deal with that kind of behavior."

But if things go as the high school superintendent expects, Lyons Township High School will create a school culture that makes it clear that you don't need to fight, lose your temper or use obscenities to get your point across. "Instead," says the former principal, "we're going to see students who understand that there are better ways of handling conflict and who know how to use them."

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6/20/98

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