¶ … history the American public has become shocked by the amount of violence that is occurring within its school system. Students have brought guns to school and used them to kill their classmates. Teachers have been attacked in the halls and administrators have been accosted as they went from the building to the car and back again. Violence in the American school system is becoming a common occurrence by previous standards and as the nation watches in shock the demand for solutions becomes almost deafening. Several years ago when the attack occurred at Columbine the nation watched in horror while dead bodies of teens laid for days in the buildings and their parents were denied access to the carnage because of the ongoing investigation. Another act of school violence occurred in Arkansas when two middle school students opened fire on their classmates who responded to a false fire alarm. Aside from the nationally televised incidences of school violence the nation is grappling with violence in its school system on a daily basis somewhere in the country. Students who bring guns to schools pose a threat but there are other offenses that do not make the news, yet pose additional serious threats to the system. Students who bring knives, drugs, and alcohol to the school also pose a threat to the conducive education of those who are mandated by law to attend school. Many schools across the nation have answered the problem of school violence and drugs with something called a zero tolerance policy. Aero tolerance stands for the refusal to accept any behaviors within certain perimeters. These behaviors usually deal with violence, or illegal activity such as drugs or alcohol. Schools have instilled zero tolerance policies which state that any infraction of such policies will result in immediate severe punishment, including expulsion from all schools within the school district for a period not less than one year. Zero tolerance policies are relatively new and this research study was designed to determine from a student's stand point whether zero tolerance policies are successful in the goal to reduce serious school infractions. The study undertakes the task of surveying students. Students are on the inside track and presumably know more than administrators about what is being done in school and what is being brought to school. This study is designed to determine whether or not zero tolerance policies are really reversing the actions.
INTRODUCTION s
Throughout the last few years the media has focused a lot of attention on school violence and other serious school infractions in American public schools. The school shootings, the drug deals and the bullying of students have moved to the forefront of attention and the focus is now on reversing its increasing incidence. Many schools across the nation have developed and implemented something called zero tolerance policies. The zero tolerance policies are meant to dissuade students from committing infractions against the most serious school rules. Some of the things that may be included in a zero tolerance policy include guns, knives and other weapons as well as drug and alcohol offenses. Different districts may also incorporate other infractions that are included in the zero tolerance policies, including threats to teachers and threats to other students of grave bodily harm or death. Regardless of what each district includes in its zero tolerance policy the belief is the infractions being placed in the zero tolerance plan will discourage students from committing them because of the seriousness of the consequence, which usually includes a long expulsion.
Indicators of School Crime and Safety, 1998 / Table A1
No matter where you are, parents want their students to be safe and secure... that might even precede a quality education..." With drugs, gangs, and guns on the rise in many communities the threat of violence "weighs heavily on most principals' minds these days...Anyone who thinks they are not vulnerable is really naive." (Principal Michael Durso, Springbrook High School, as quoted in the Washingtonian Magazine, September 1997) (Safe, 1997).
This concern of parents and administrators has prompted zero tolerance policies throughout the nation. Determining their effectiveness is something that is just now becoming possible as the nation marks a several year anniversary of the existence of the policies.
It is important to understand whether or not the zero tolerance policies are effective in the reduction and prevention of acts of violence or crime. The decision to invest in training administrators how to implement zero tolerance as well as the sense of security the zero tolerance policies give the local communities underscore...
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