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School Shootings

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School Shootings Top Stories

 

A 16-year-old boy was shot dead by a second student Thursday in a school cafeteria in Knoxville, Tennessee, police said.

The 15-year-old shooter pulled a gun out of his backpack, shot the other boy and then "casually walked away as if nothing had happened," one student told pastor Kevin Perry.

This is the latest is a series of deadly shootings in US schools.

At least 449 people have been killed at US elementary and high schools since 1992, according to a recent report by the National School Safety Center.

Of those, 333 were shot either on campus, at a school event or on the way to or from school.

The 2007 to 2008 school year (which runs from August to June) was relatively free of violence for younger students: only three were killed compared with 20 the year before.

However, there were several shootings at US colleges, including six people killed at Northern Illinois University in February.

The deadliest school shooting in US history was at Virginia Tech University where 33 people were killed on April 16, 2007.

Does it take one death or more to actually make the news? Shouldn't it be enough that there is this multitude of shootings going on in our high schools and colleges, regardless of the number of people who live and die? read more ..

Six dead, 16 injured in Valentine's Day campus massacre. 22 Shot at Northern Illinois University.

A black-clad former student turned a university lecture hall into a Valentine's Day massacre Thursday, killing five people and injuring 16 others before turning a gun on himself, in the fifth US school shooting in a week, authorities said.

Armed with a shotgun and two handguns, he calmly stepped out from behind the curtain at the front of an auditorium just minutes before a geology class ended, officials and witnesses said.

Screams filled the hall as he sprayed a hail of bullets from the stage of the auditorium filled with dozens of students at Northern Illinois University, in a suburb of Chicago. Learn more ...

The profile of the gun-toting student in a trench coat is just one of the myths about the rare but murderous attacks in the nation's schools.

Here are 10 myths about school shootings, compiled by MSNBC.com from a 2006 study by the U.S. Secret Service and the U.S. Department of Education. The researchers studied case files and other primary sources for 37 attacks by current or former students, and also interviewed 10 of the perpetrators.

 

Myth No. 1. "He didn't fit the profile."

 In fact, there is no profile. "There is no accurate or useful 'profile' of students who engaged in targeted school violence," the researchers found.

The stereotypes of teens in Goth makeup or other types of dress are not useful in preventing attacks. Just as in other areas of security -- workplace violence, airplane hijacking, even presidential assassination -- too many innocent students will fit any profile you can come up with, and too many attackers will not.

"The demographic, personality, school history, and social characteristics of the attackers varied substantially," the report said. Attackers were of all races and family situations, with academic achievement ranging from failing to excellent.

Most, but not all, have been male, though that fact alone doesn't help an adult rule in or out someone as dangerous.

 Myth No. 2. "He just snapped."

Rarely were incidents of school violence sudden, impulsive acts. Attackers do not "just snap," but progress from forming an idea, to planning an attack, to gathering weapons. This process can happen quickly, but sometimes the planning or gathering weapons are discoverable.

Although the researchers point out that there is no "type of student" who is likely to commit such violence, there are "types of behaviors" that are common to planning or carrying out the attacks. This pattern, they say, gives some hope of intervening before an attack.

Myth No. 3. "No one knew."

Before most of the attacks, someone else knew about the idea or the plan. "In most cases, those who knew were other kids: friends, schoolmates, siblings and others. However, this information rarely made its way to an adult." Most attackers engaged in some behavior prior to the incident that caused concern or indicated a need for help.

 Myth No. 4. "He hadn't threatened anyone."

Too much emphasis is placed on threats. Most attackers did not threaten anyone explicitly ("I'm going to kill the principal"), and most threateners don't ever attack anyone.

But less explicit words can reveal an intention, the researchers say. A child who talks of bringing a gun to school, or being angry at teachers or classmates, can pose a threat, whether or not an explicit threat is made.

Myth No. 5. "He was a loner."

In many cases, students were considered in the mainstream of the student population and were active in sports, school clubs or other activities.

Only one-quarter of the students hung out with a group of students considered to be part of a "fringe group."

Myth No. 6. "He was crazy."

Only one-third of the attackers had ever been seen by a mental health professional, and only one-fifth had been diagnosed with a mental disorder. Substance abuse problems were also not prevalent. "However, most attackers showed some history of suicidal attempts or thoughts, or a history of feeling extreme depression or desperation." Most attackers had difficulty coping with significant losses or personal failures.

Myth No. 7. "If only we'd had a SWAT team or metal detectors."

Despite prompt law enforcement responses, most shooting incidents were over well before a SWAT team could have arrived.  Metal detectors have not deterred students who were committed to killing themselves and others.

Myth No. 8. "He'd never touched a gun."

Most attackers had access to weapons, and had used them prior to the attack. Most of the attackers acquired their guns from home.

Myth No. 9. "We did everything we could to help him."

"Many attackers felt bullied, persecuted or injured by others prior to the attack," and said they had tried without success to get someone to intervene. Administrators and teachers were targeted in more than half the incidents.

 Myth No. 10. "School violence is rampant."

It may seem so, with media attention focused on a spate of school shootings. In fact, school shootings are extremely rare. Even including the more common violence that is gang-related or dispute-related, only 12 to 20 homicides a year occur in the 100,000 schools in the U.S. In general, school assaults and other violence have dropped by nearly half in the past decade.


* Kindly lensroll this lens in support and in memory of the victims, family, friends and faculty of Virginia Tech and ALL school shooting worldwide.

 

FREE SPECIAL REPORT: Four Ways to Make Back to School Safe

Boks About School Shootings 

Keeping Children and Teenagers Safe (and Parents Sane)

Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult

Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult

Jodi Picoult, bestselling author of My Sister's Ke more...1 point

The Shooting Game: The Making of School Shooters by Joseph Lieberman

The Shooting Game: The Making of School Shooters by Joseph Lieberman

Once again, on April 16, 2007, we were shocked by more...1 point

Shooter in the Sky : The Inner World Of Children Who Kill by Lauren J. Woodhouse

Shooter in the Sky : The Inner World Of Children Who Kill by Lauren J. Woodhouse

High school student Harold Connally feels alienate more...1 point

In this gripping composite biography of a teenager who kills, psychologist Lauren Wo...

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The Gift of Fear : Survival Signals That Protect Us from Violence (Cassette)

The Gift of Fear : Survival Signals That Protect Us from Violence (Cassette)

True fear is a gift. Unwarranted fear is a curse. more...0 points

Innocent Targets: When Terrorism Comes to School by Michael Dorn, Chris Dorn

Innocent Targets: When Terrorism Comes to School by Michael Dorn, Chris Dorn

Innocent Targets - When Terrorism Comes to School more...0 points

Rampage: The Social Roots of School Shootings by Katherine S. Newman, Cybelle Fox, Wendy Roth, Jal Mehta, David Harding

Rampage: The Social Roots of School Shootings by Katherine S. Newman, Cybelle Fox, Wendy Roth, Jal Mehta, David Harding

In the last decade, school shootings have decimate more...0 points

No Easy Answers: The Truth Behind Death at Columbine by Brooks Brown, Rob Merritt

No Easy Answers: The Truth Behind Death at Columbine by Brooks Brown, Rob Merritt

On April 20, 1999, Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, more...0 points

Few people knew Dylan Klebold or Eric Harris better than Brooks Brown. Brown and Klebold were best friends in grade school, and years later, at Columbine, Brown was privy to some of Harris and Klebold's darkest fantasies a...

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Deadly Lessons: Understanding Lethal School Violence by National Research Council

Deadly Lessons: Understanding Lethal School Violence by National Research Council

The shooting at Columbine High School riveted nati more...0 points

Stop Teaching Our Kids to Kill : A Call to Action Against TV, Movie and Video Game Violence by Dave Grossman, Gloria Degaetano

Stop Teaching Our Kids to Kill : A Call to Action Against TV, Movie and Video Game Violence by Dave Grossman, Gloria Degaetano

There is perhaps no bigger or more important issue more...0 points

Eight killed at Finland school after YouTube post 

Wed Nov 7, 2007

An 18-year-old gunman opened fire at his high school in this placid town in southern Finland on Wednesday, killing seven other students and the principal before mortally wounding himself in a rampage that stunned a nation where gun crime is rare.

Police were analyzing YouTube postings that appeared to anticipate the massacre, including clips in which a young man calls for revolution and apparently prepares for the attack by test firing a semiautomatic handgun.

Police were analyzing YouTube postings that appeared to anticipate the massacre, including clips in which a young man calls for revolution and apparently prepares for the attack by test firing a semiautomatic handgun.

Investigators said the gunman, who was not identified, shot himself in the head after the shooting spree at Jokela High School in Tuusula, some 30 miles north of the capital, Helsinki. He died later at Toolo Hospital in Helsinki.

The teen killed five boys, two girls and the female principal with a .22-caliber pistol, police said. Officials said one person was wounded by a bullet and about a dozen others suffered cuts and other injuries while fleeing the school. Officials said more than 400 students ages 12 through 18 were enrolled.

Witnesses described a scene of mayhem at the school in this leafy lakeside community, saying the shooter prowled the building looking for victims while shouting slogans for "revolution."

Police Chief Matti Tohkanen said the gunman didn't have a previous criminal record. "He was from an ordinary family," Tohkanen said. He said the teen belonged to a gun club and had gotten a license for the pistol Oct. 19.

Gun ownership is fairly common in Finland by European standards, but deadly shootings are rare. Finnish media reported that a school shooting in 1989 involved a 14-year-old boy who killed two other students apparently for teasing him.

Investigators were searching for connections to the shooter and a possible motive in YouTube postings that appeared to reveal plans for Wednesday's deadly attack.

One video, titled "Jokela High School Massacre," showed a picture of what appeared to be the Jokela school and two photos of a young man holding a handgun. The person who posted the video was identified in the user profile as an 18-year-old man from Finland. The posting was later removed.

The profile contained a text calling for a "revolution against the system."

Another video clip showed a young man clad in a dark jacket loading a clip into a handgun and firing several shots at an apple placed on the ground in a wooded area. He smiled and waved to the camera at the end of the clip.

A third clip showed photos of what appeared to be same man posing with a gun and wearing a T-shirt with the text "Humanity is overrated."

Kim Kiuru, a teacher, said the principal announced over the public address system just before noon that all students should remain in their classrooms.

"After that I saw the gunman running with what appeared to be a small-caliber handgun in his hand through the doors toward me, after which I escaped to the corridor downstairs and ran in the opposite direction," Kiuru told reporters.

He said he saw a woman's body as he fled the building.

"Then my pupils shouted at me out of the windows to ask what they should do and I told them to jump out of the windows ... and all my pupils were saved," Kiuru said.

Terhi Vayrynen, a 17-year-old student, told The Associated Press that her brother Henri, 13, and his classmates had witnessed the assailant shoot the principal outside the school through their classroom windows.

She said the gunman then entered her brother's classroom shouting: "Revolution! Smash everything!"

When no one did anything, the attacker shot the television set and windows but did not fire at the youngsters, she said. Then he ran out and down the corridor.

Vivianna Korhonen, a student at the high school, told Finnish broadcaster YLE she feared for her life as news of the shooting spread through the building.

"We were terrified and afraid. We thought that we might die as he was still able to come to our classroom," she said. "We were informed all the time. We were calling our friends and asking for information."

Residents in Tuusula, a town of 34,000 people, said such attacks were unheard of in the area.

"Mostly nothing happens here, this is nice surroundings and not any criminals to talk of. This was a total surprise," said Reijo Pekka, whose son Arttu Siltala was at the school.

Students said the killer often wore the same clothes to school - brown leather jacket, black trousers and checkered shirt - and usually carried a briefcase.

Tuomas Hulkkonen, another student, said he knew the gunman well, adding that the teen had been acting strange lately.

"He withdrew into his shell. I had noticed a change in him just recently, and I thought that perhaps he was a bit depressed, or something, but I couldn't imagine that in reality he would do anything like this," Hulkkonen told Finnish TV broadcaster MTV3.

Experts warned that the shooting could inspire copycat attacks.

"An event like this in Finland might have an effect in the U.S.," said Christopher P. Lucas, a psychiatry professor at New York University.

He said YouTube provides a ready way for shooters to publicize their acts and provide some sort of justification.

Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen described the bloodshed as "extremely tragic" and declared Thursday a day of national mourning with flags to be flown half-staff.

___

Associated Press writers Matti Huuhtanen in Helsinki, Finland, and Malin Rising, in Stockholm, Sweden, contributed to this report.

Mom Charged With Buying Pa. Teen Weapons 

The mother of a 14-year-old who authorities say had a cache of guns, knives and explosive devices in his bedroom for a possible school attack was charged Friday with buying her son three weapons.

Michele Cossey bought her son a .22-caliber handgun, a .22-caliber rifle and a 9 mm semiautomatic rifle, authorities said. The teenager, who is home schooled, felt bullied and tried to recruit another boy for the possible attack at Plymouth Whitemarsh High School, authorities said.

Police on Wednesday found the rifle, about 30 air-powered guns, swords, knives, a bomb-making book, videos of the 1999 Columbine attack in Colorado and violence-filled notebooks, Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce L. Castor Jr. said.

Cossey bought the rifle, which had a laser scope, at a gun show on Sept. 23 and provided police with a receipt, investigators said in court papers. The teenager said the two .22-caliber weapons were stored at a friend's house.

Learn more ...

Cleveland School Shooting inspires blame game 

http://news.cincypost.com/

School officials face many questions about how a troubled teen who had previously threatened classmates got past security to carry out his shooting spree.

Asa Coon, 14, walked down the hallway of his high school Wednesday with two guns and started shooting, wounding two students and two teachers before killing himself.

City schools chief executive Eugene Sanders planned today to give the mayor a plan to address whether additional security measures are needed and how the school identifies potential problems among students.

A draft of the plan called for airport-style X-ray machines to screen student backpacks, book bags and purses at all high schools, the Plain Dealer reported. Members of the Cleveland Teachers Union told district officials that they want metal detectors in every school building and training for staff and students on how to deal with anti-social behavior.

Coon was ridiculed by classmates at SuccessTech Academy, exchanged curses with his mother and idolized Marilyn Manson. He had a tendency not to fight back when teased, but recently got into an after-school scuffle, was suspended and made threats that he would blow up his school or stab everybody. The teen's threats weren't taken seriously.

Coon, who stood out for dressing in black trench coats and chains, followed through on them Wednesday.

"This kid finally broke," Christina Burns, who volunteered at a school Coon previously attended, said Thursday. "He finally lost his mind."

Burns witnessed Coon's troubles with fellow students, recalling an instance where a child dropped a book on his head and he did nothing. She also remembered verbal abuse over his shabby, at times unclean, appearance.

"They picked on him," Burns said. "He didn't have decent clothing. He didn't have decent shoes. He had problems. The other children played on that and tormented him at school."

Coon was the subject of a juvenile court neglect case at age 4 and came from a poor home. He was intelligent, having won a citywide chess tournament last December, The Plain Dealer said. But he but struggled with school work, unable to focus, Burns said. His moods swung.

Despite 26 security cameras at SuccessTech Academy, officials couldn't say Thursday how Coon got inside. Police were checking the video Thursday for clues. A classmate could have let him in a back door, police Chief Michael McGrath said.

Students said metal detectors were intermittently used. None were operating on Wednesday, two days after Coon had been suspended.

Armed with two revolvers and wearing black clothing, black-painted fingernails and a Marilyn Manson T-shirt - the shock rocker Coon said he chose to worship instead of God - Coon fired eight times and shot two teachers and two students. One teacher remained hospitalized Thursday. A student who injured her knee while fleeing was released from the hospital Thursday.

Coon, a freshman who court records show had threatened suicide previously, shot himself behind his right ear with a .38-caliber shot shell loaded with pellets. Coroner Frank Miller ruled the death a suicide.

McGrath, asked how Coon got past an armed security guard or whether warnings signs were missed, said he couldn't comment. He said police work with school officials on the issue of where to locate metal detectors, based in part on crime in schools.

Charles Blackwell, president of SuccessTech's student-parent organization, said the position of a second security guard had been eliminated because of lack of money.

SuccessTech Academy had no reports of student discipline problems in the past three years, according to state data. Districtwide, the city schools reported 100 cases of students possessing a gun last year, 55 the year before and 136 cases in the 2004-2005 school year.

His probation officer described the relationship between Coon and his mother as extremely poor, with both using foul and abusive language toward each other. Their home was reported in poor condition with dog waste littering the front yard.

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Oregon teacher wins first round in legal fight to bring gun to school 

South Medford High School English teacher Shirley Katz won the first round of her legal bout for the right to carry a pistol onto school grounds today.

Jackson County Circuit Judge G. Philip Arnold dismissed a motion by the Medford School District to dismiss the case because she has not actually broken the school policy prohibiting teachers from bringing guns to school.

The judge told Katz he will issue a written opinion on her claim that the policy violates state law that gives concealed weapons permit holders the right to take guns into schools and other public buildings.

Outside the courtroom, Katz said it would be "naive" to think no one is carrying guns to school, she is just the first person with a concealed weapons permit to assert her rights in public.

Her attorney, James Leuenberger, argued in court that the Legislature never intend to give cities, counties or school districts power to regulate guns.

School district attorney Tim Gerking countered that the school district policy does not fall under that prohibition, because it only applies to employees and not the general public.

Gerking added that if Katz wins, "school districts ... could be reduced to armed camps," and school officials could be blamed for gun accidents at schools.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Virginia Tech School Shootings 

Deadliest in a Long History of US School Shootings

The horror this unprecedented carnage inflicts on our entire nation is unfathomable. The shooting rampage left at least 30 dead. No one knows why a deranged gunman invaded a quiet campus and killed 30 innocent souls.

Obviously the scale of this has left unspeakable shock across the US. The scene is eerily reminiscent of the 1989 tragedy at Montreal's Ecole Polytechnique, when a deranged gunman shot and killed 14 women after shouting that he hated feminists.

A shaken university community was last night struggling to make sense of a massacre by one, possibly two armed gunmen on the sprawling campus of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, that police and school officials say left 33 people dead, and 15 injured, several critically. Shock and horror have given way to sorrow and anger over the carnage that is the worst mass shooting in American history.

Mid-April is the time of the year for school shootings in the US. The shooting came ahead of the busy exam season, when many students struggle to cope. One msut remember that in the state of Virginia there is a strong gun culture. There are lots of guns around on campus because there is a corps of cadets. Virginia Tech is one of a few universities with a military training program.

Campus police, local police, state troopers, and FBI officers are on the scene and have overseen a mass exodus of students, staff and faculty from the sprawling campus.

Authorities are continuing their investigation into how a lone gunman managed to barricade a building of faculty offices, laboratories and classrooms by chaining closed the front doors from the inside and open fire with enough ammunition to kill and injure dozens.

This, some two hours after two students, one of them a resident adviser, were shot and killed in the campus dormitory.

Amid tough questions about why the campus was not secured after the first shooting incident, Virginia Tech Police Chief Wendell Flinchum several times at a news conference refused to reveal what, if anything, connects the first homicides to the second bloody rampage.

Virginia Tech, which is spread over 1,000 hectares, has 26,000 students, 9,000 students who live on campus, and 10,000 employees, was swift to set up a centre for family and friends, as well as a centre for the new media in its Alumni Hall into which reporters from the around the world continue to stream and ask questions for which there are few answers at this time. Many of the unanswered questions have to do with the length of time it took university officials to inform the student body of the danger.
THE deadliest school shooting in US history is, reviving calls for tighter gun control and renewing the debate about campus security.

President George W. Bush led expressions of dismay saying he was "shocked and saddened'' by the shooting rampage that left at least 33 dead and many more wounded at a university in Virginia.

"Schools should be places of safety, and sanctuary, and learning. When that sanctuary is violated, the impact is felt in every American classroom and every American community,'' Mr Bush said.

"Today our nation grieves with those who have lost loved ones at Virginia Tech. We hold the victims in our hearts. We lift them up in our prayers. And we ask a loving God to comfort those who are suffering today.''

We still live in a society where gun violence is an overriding concern ...

School Shooting Videos 

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School Violence

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School Shootings

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Bowling for Columbine 

The United States of America is notorious for its astronomical number of people killed by firearms for a developed nation without a civil war. With his signature sense of angry humour, activist filmmaker Michael Moore sets out to explore the roots of this bloodshed.

In doing so, he learns that the conventional answers of easy availability of guns, violent national history, violent entertainment and even poverty are inadequate to explain this violence when other cultures share those same factors without the equivalent carnage.

In order to arrive at a possible explanation, Michael Moore takes on a deeper examination of America's culture of fear, bigotry and violence in a nation with widespread gun ownership. Furthermore, he seeks to investigate and confront the powerful elite political and corporate interests fanning this culture for their own unscrupulous gain.

America, Guns & Violence 

The Role Guns Play In America

This article is about a poignant documentary by Michael Moore. Some of you may have seen it, some of you may not have. We believe it is essential that EVERYONE (not just Americans) view this documentary. (links below) As Americans' we  desire truth, integrity, authenticity and quality.

Here you have it. Michael Moore's "Bowling for Columbine is a flat-out brilliant cinematic essay on the issue of guns and violence in American society. In the early going, Moore might have you doubled over with laughter. By the end, the impact of the questions he raises in this two-hour film are disturbing enough that you might not be able to speak for a while. Thoughtful, inquisitive, imaginative and troubling, "Bowling" is a kick in the butt no matter where
you stand on the role guns play in American culture.

Once you realize Moore is a member of the National Rifle Assn., you know this isn't going to be the usual harangue about gun control from a leftist kook. His primary goal is, of course, to entertain. Moore has a shrewd sense of himself as an Everyman's Mike Wallace, a lumbering, rotund figure who ambles into people's lives to pose questions in a seriocomic manner that takes the edge off his temerity. From a kid who tests bomb-making recipes from "The Anarchist's Cookbook" and a producer of the TV show "Cops" to NRA president Charlton Heston, these encounters are often funny. Yet Moore moves past this "Candid Camera" gimmick to doggedly stick to questions that rote answers will not turn aside.

"What is it about Americans, guns and violence?" Moore asks. The usual answers range from the bloody history of the United States to the negative influences of the media, a broad-ranging group of scapegoats that include Marilyn Manson and video games. Yet Moore points to the even bloodier histories of nations where gun-related deaths are few. And blaming Manson makes as much sense as blaming bowling, things the shooters at Columbine High School both enjoyed.

As Moore digs deeper and continues to ask hard questions that stump everyone, a grim reality sets in for those of us who live in a nation that has armed itself with a quarter of a billion household firearms. In "Bowling," there are no easy answers and often no answers at all, just a number of very uneasy questions.. "It's a campaign of fear and consumption," states rock star Marilyn Manson, "Keep people afraid and they'll consume."

This lucid insight into the connection between our mass media news diet, the incitement of fear, and consumerism emerged in an interview with Manson in the recent film, Bowling for Columbine. Manson was the brunt of criticism by many community members and the media for somehow inciting the kind of violence that led to the tragic 1999 incident in Littleton, Colorado where two Columbine High School students killed twelve students and a teacher using handguns.

Why direct blame toward Manson? Because of the rock lyrics he writes. And yet, asks Manson, who has more influence on violent behavior, [former] President Clinton, who was shooting bombs overseas, or himself, just a guy singing some rock and roll songs?

On the same day of the shootings at Columbine, the film's maker Michael Moore points out in his interview with Manson, President Clinton ordered the heaviest bombing assault yet in Kosovo.

"What would you say to the kids who did the shooting at Columbine," asks Moore. Manson responds: "I wouldn't say a thing. I'd listen to what they have to say. That's what no one did."

Bowling for Columbine is a gutsy, often disturbing probe into the absurd cycle of fear prevalent in American culture today. Our obsession with guns, suggests the film, is the same irrational obsession driving the U.S. war economy. Our violent, fear-filled society is one marked, not coincidentally, by addictive over consumption. Not long after September 11, George W. Bush evoked the fear of terrorism and the virtues of being a good consumer, practically in the same breath.

Survey of Teen Attitudes on Gun Violence 

Survey of teen attitudes on gun violence

"If we keep kids safe from aspirin bottles, yo-yos and toasters, the least we can do is pass laws to protect them from the most dangerous product in the United States" - Senator Dick Durbin.

This survey is a wake up call to our leaders to create an environment in which our young people can learn and reward us by becoming productive adults. Not worry from moment to moment where the next gunshot will come from. These findings will show why we must continue to make violence prevention programs a regular part of our children's life experience.

Survey for teens between the ages of 13-19

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School Violence and the Media 

The names roll off the tongue like a litany of battlefields: Pearl, Mississippi; West Paducah, Kentucky; Jonesboro, Arkansas; Edinboro, Pennsylvania; Springfield, Oregon; and Littleton, Colorado. These places have been war zones of a sort, infamous sites of school violence that have captured headlines across the country and reaped hours of coverage on network television. The schools and the media sometimes seem locked in a symbiotic dance of death, making it difficult to think about school violence without taking note of its connection to the ever-present media.

What does this link between school violence and the media mean? How closely are the two really related? Is the criticism of the media for their possible role in fomenting violence reasonable? Or may it be a case of wanting to kill the messenger simply because the messenger is, both figuratively and literally, the reporter? This is, after all, a violent society and it has been since its earliest days. The U.S. is a country where guns often can be bought over the counter as easily as toaster ovens, where films are replete with images of death, and where violent video games capture the time and attention of legions of pubescent males.

Within the schools, bullying, misogyny, gay bashing, and outright attacks on students, and even teachers, have been regular features. Some students find models for their violent acts among their own parents. In Brooklyn's East New York section, on the last day of school in June 1999, an elementary school student dissatisfied with the grades her teacher had marked on her report card ran home to complain to her mother. Daughter and mother returned to school and, together, assaulted the teacher, who suffered contusions, scratches, and bruises to the head, face, hands, and arm. A judge sent the mother to jail for 60 days and put her on probation for three years.

Lest anyone think this is a purely American phenomenon, it is worth noting that a wave of violence in French schools during Winter 1999-2000 led to school closings as teachers and parents protested the rising level of violence among students. And we can hardly forget the gunman at the school in Dunblane, Scotland, who killed 16 students and a teacher in 1996. But it should surprise no one that schools-in the United States or almost anywhere else-and the areas surrounding them are occasionally sites of violent acts involving children. This is where young people congregate; this is where their perceived grievances are apt to be manifest.

The news media take notice precisely because shootings in school are unusual. News comprises aberrations. Most schools most of the time are, in fact, safe places. The exceptions make the news, as they do in all areas of human endeavor. Is it reasonable, then, to expect the news media to ignore or even downplay violence when it occurs in schools? The very fact that schools are supposed to be safe havens makes violent acts newsworthy. There is the ever present aim of the media to explain the inexplicable, to make sense of the irrational. The media have always been attracted to oddities and mysteries. So what can be more odd and mysterious than adolescents shooting down their classmates! In the suburbs-the white suburbs, no less.

The Media's Record: Selective Coverage

Where were the media during the 1980s and the 1990s when African American and Latino youngsters were toting guns and shooting each other in schools, near schools, on the way to and from schools, and during drive-by shootings in the 'hood? The tacit answer is that little heed was paid by the media because these infractions did not measure up to the common definition of news. They were not judged to be anomalies. The incidents, after all, were what some white journalists expected in minority neighborhoods. And so we search in vain through
news columns and videotapes of newscasts for more than the occasional in-depth report on children killing each other in and out of schools in Anacostia, in East LA, in Bed-Stuy, and in Roxbury. Just in the first half of the 1999-2000 school year alone, some dozen and a half school-aged children were killed - away from schools - in the District of Columbia, with hardly a mention in the news media outside Washington.

To some degree, this has been the media's historic approach in reporting on crime generally: violence in minority communities has not received the amount of coverage that the same incident gets if it occurs in affluent white neighborhoods. "What's ironic to me, and especially to many of my black students, is that Columbine and the major incidents of school violence that have sparked the recent national concern over safety were perpetrated by white kids," wrote Patrick Welsh (2000), an English teacher at T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria, Virginia. "To black students, the refrain `We believed it couldn't happen here' coming from Columbine and other communities was code for `We didn't think white kids could do a thing like this.'"

And so it is that school violence in places where the media least expect it, in predominantly white suburbs and bucolic rural locales, has been a magnet to reporters. There may be no end to the milking of what journalists regard as a "good" story. Newspapers and television outlets seek what is known in the trade as a "news peg"-a justification on which a story can be hung-even long after the event itself. Anniversaries of news events, including those involving school violence, become occasions for revisiting the story. Officials at Columbine High School, keenly aware that this would happen on April 20, 2000, exactly one year after the shootings, even scheduled news briefings in the weeks leading up to the anniversary to help the reporters prepare their stories.

Effects of Coverage


What effect does this media coverage actually have? Does it incite others to violence, creating so-called copycat incidents? Do incidents increase in the wake of coverage? Would the seventh-grader who shot and killed his teacher in Lake Worth, Florida, on the last day of school in May 2000 have done so if the earlier murders at Columbine and violence by students in other locales had been downplayed by the media? One can hardly give a definitive answer to such questions. A recent report maintains that public fears about youth violence have been mounting even as evidence accumulates that such incidents have been decreasing; school-associated violent deaths decreased from 43 in 1998 to 26 in 1999, including the shootings at Columbine (Schiraldi & Ziedenberg, 2000).

Fear of Youth Violence.

Nonetheless, the portion of Americans who believed that a shooting was likely in their neighborhood school rose from 49 percent to 70 percent during the same one-year period (Brooks, Schiraldi, & Ziedenberg, 2000), perhaps indicating that the media help stir fears by focusing on the relatively few fatal incidents inside school buildings. Consider the difference between the perceptions of teachers and the general public when it comes to school safety. Only 24 percent of the public describe the learning environment for children in schools as "very safe and orderly," while 43 percent of teachers-the adults who are in those classrooms every day and rely least on the accounts of the media-deem the classrooms very safe and orderly (Langdon & Vesper, 2000).

Perhaps the problem, in part, rests with the disproportionate amount of coverage that criminal incidents of any kind tend to receive when juveniles are involved, leading people to think that youth violence is ubiquitous. Kathryn C. Montgomery of the Center for Media Education, speaking at a 2000 seminar of Teacher College's Hechinger Institute on Education and the Media, estimated that
two-thirds of the coverage of crime by the media deals with acts by juveniles despite the fact that they are responsible for only one third of the crime.

Furthermore, less than 1 percent of homicides among 12- to 19-year-olds occur in schools, and 90 percent of the schools in the United States report no violent crimes (Fast Facts About School Violence, 1999). This is clearly a nation that fears its young, and the media must bear some measure of blame for that sad
situation.

Copycat Incidents.

On the other hand, though young people may not be inclined to shoot their classmates as a result of seeing an account of their peers doing so, they may take other, less egregious, actions.

For example, they may be inspired by the coverage of youth violence to call in bomb threats in an effort to disrupt schools and wield some power. In fact, bomb scares have become so prevalent that states around the country are enacting legislation aimed at perpetrators, according to Education Week (Blair, 2000). Penalties include suspension of drivers' licenses, expulsion from school, and
damage payments assessed against parents.

What are the media to do?

The media's apparent policy is not to report all bomb scares, though this might be because editors consider such incidents as unnewsworthy (unless a bomb is discovered), not because they want to limit copycat acts. But, in the wake of actual violent incidents, this policy becomes more difficult to follow. "Our policy on bomb threats used to be that we just didn't report on them," said Jennifer Brett, a reporter for the Atlanta Journal Constitution. "We felt it would just encourage the practice. But then the Heritage High School shooting happened [in Conyers, Georgia, where six students were shot] and for a while after that anything would really raise a red flag and we'd go racing. Since then, our policy has been back to what it was before: we try to assess on a case-by-case basis" (Hechinger Institute, 2000).

Violence Reporting by the Visual Media

Debates over journalistic treatment of school violence should distinguish between portrayals in print and those on television. The difference has to do with the different natures of the two media. Television provides an immediacy that print can seldom duplicate. Television is graphic, in your face; print is easier to ignore. The upshot is that violence in the electronic media can be particularly harmful because children more readily connect with visual images (Koziey, 1996). Watching this sort of action appears to desensitize the young and lead to aggressive behavior (Levine, 1996; Simmons, Stalsworth, & Wentzel, 1999). Yet, while aggression may be triggered in some children, these tendencies may already be present in them and not be a result of their television-watching (Primavera, Herron, & Jauier, 1996). The young people inclined to watch the most violent fare may be those who already are most predisposed to violence. As an analogue, the students who do worst in school tend to watch the most television, but this is not to say that there is a cause and effect. It cannot be declared definitively that violence in the media begets violence in the larger society and in schools in particular.

Television news predicates much of its approach on retaining viewers. The implications for newscasts are appalling. Television news directors and reporters feel compelled to present information in short, punchy takes; there is little time for elucidation.

Depictions of violence lend themselves to this practice, with outlets such as Court TV, a cable network, using footage of actual crimes as a source of entertainment. Jim Squires (1998), a veteran political reporter and a former editor of the Chicago Tribune, maintains that the broadcast industry has surrendered to the entertainment industry, and that news in the visual media is valued not for its inherent importance or public service "but for its ability to attract an audience and turn a profit." And there is evidence that children are frightened when violence figures in the news (Cantor & Nathanson, 1996). None of this is to say that television is not capable of distinguished journalism or that the medium is inherently inferior to print. In dissecting the coverage of the school shootings in Jonesboro, Ed Turner (1998) concluded that television "scored few major hits, but it didn't commit any major blunders.

The nightly newscasts were thorough, if lacking real depth...;" Coverage of a topic as sensitive and subtle as violence in schools cannot fare well in the ratings-oriented climate in which commercial television operates. This was illustrated in San Antonio when a local television station broke a story about a possible shooting at an elementary school at 8:27 one Fall morning in 1999. A rival television station followed five minutes later with its own version of the story and that station's radio counterpart interrupted its morning broadcast with a report on the events. Viewers and listeners of these broadcast outlets heard about shots fired and people wounded. But nothing had happened at the school; there had been gunshots fired on a highway miles away from the school (Pompilio, 2000).

Violence as Entertainment in the Media

Violence is rampant in media entertainment that makes no pretense of being journalism, though it is unclear whether such fare is so readily available because people want it or whether people turn to it because it is so easy to obtain. Television programs, movies, video games, and even pop music (such as the lyrics of some rap songs) seem not to hesitate to depict violence. A universe of Arnold Schwarzeneggers and Jean Claude Van Dammes provides models for the nation's testosterone-driven young males. Nonetheless, entertainment industry executives do not readily accept blame for youth violence. In advance of a meeting at the White House that President Bill Clinton convened to address the causes of violence by teenagers, David Geffen, one of the founders of Dreamworks SKG film studio, said that people may as well blame libraries for youth violence: "They're full of violent books," he said (Broder,1999).

Video games are now ubiquitous and adults who take the time to view them are shocked by the horrific content of some. One of the newest games, Soldier of Fortune, not only allows a player, for just $45.99, to shoot and kill an enemy but to inflict all sorts of gradations of injury, from shooting off arms, to putting bullets into the enemy's throat, to putting a bullet in the "right" place in the stomach to make the guts exude (Olafson,2000). Lawyers have gone so far as to plead some youthful perpetrators of violence innocent on the basis that they were corrupted by watching videos and other violent media.

But Henry Jenkins, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said that critics have produced little compelling evidence to suggest that video game violence leads directly to real-world violence and that "much of the evidence that they do present has been exaggerated and simplified" (Gillespie & d'Igital, 2000, p. 20). An author writing in Phi Delta Kappan came to a similar conclusion, though with a different twist that put more of the responsibility in the laps of parents: "[W]e don't have a problem with violent video games or with the children who play them. We do have a problem with parents who don't seem to be concerned, who continue to buy or let their children buy violent video games, and who then never supervise their children's often excessive playing of video games...;" (VanHorn, 1999).

Media Responsibility on the Coverage of Violence

Intensive coverage of a few high-profile shootings may mislead the public to think that violence in schools is pervasive. The media should not explode small occurrences into major incidents; when the occasional major incident does occur it should be kept in perspective-not portrayed as the norm. Furthermore, the media should respect privacy to the degree possible and not trample on the rights of minors in ways that threaten to destroy their psyches and even their lives. The National Education Association (NEA, n.d.), in the wake of the Columbine shootings, issued the following admonition in an open letter to the news media: 'Although reporters have a very important job in gathering information from the scene, we have learned that interviews with students immediately following a crisis can cause unintended damage. The first person a student should talk to following a tragedy is a counselor, not a reporter.' In a separate document, the NEA (2000) listed ten steps for newspeople, including requests to avoid a repetition of violent images that provide "a false impression of schools" and to avoid focusing on "lurid details and motivations of perpetrators."

The Chicago Sun-Times attracted attention when it refused to put news of the shootings, first at Springfield, and then at Columbine, on its front page. Both stories were relegated to inside pages. The paper's editor, Nigel Wade, justified his decision on the basis that children were involved and the situations were delicate. While critics might wish that more news organizations exercised similar restraint, it is unlikely that many will emulate this approach. Most editors say that the reporting of events that are by their nature sensational should not be confused with sensationalism. Just the fact that there was extensive and thorough reporting on the Columbine tragedy, for example, does not necessarily indicate a shortcoming on the part of the press. The Denver Post won a Pulitzer Prize-journalism's most prestigious award-for its coverage of the events at Columbine. The newspaper said it considered the recognition an acknowledgment that it had behaved in a compassionate and responsible way.

Another aspect of the media's relationship with schools stems from the zero tolerance policies that are meant to draw a line against violence at the schoolhouse door. These well-intentioned policies have sparked some very clumsy results-often reported by the media-when schools are forced to apply a one-penalty-fits-all consequence even to the least provocation. The result can be a media circus-almost on the level of the media's response to actual acts of violence-as television stations and newspapers focus on some of the most egregious enforcement practices, making school officials look petty and foolish. In Sayreville, New Jersey, for instance, four kindergartners were suspended for three days after a playground incident in which fingers were pointed as make-believe guns and threats were apparently exchanged. In Larchmont, New York, an 11-year-old was suspended for reciting a poem to several girls on the playground: "Roses are red, violets are black. Your chest is as flat as your back." Perhaps a wiser course, assert Curwin and Mendler (1999), might be a middle path that threads its way between being firm and being fair.

Schools, being the educational institutions that they are, should strive to use good educational practice rather than Draconian punishments to persuade students to eschew violence. They should do so not because of the threat of embarrassment in the media, but simply because it is good policy. A goal, as Hyman and Snook (2000) point out, should be the creation of educational models to reduce school violence rather than enforcement models. This can mean paying closer attention to the school climate, practicing more democracy within schools, equipping students with conflict resolution skills, and using peer mediation. Will such measures inoculate schools against violence? Not likely, but they may diminish the potential for violence and lessen the need for
policies that lead to embarrassment in the media.

Finally, in the era of new technology, it is necessary to take account of an unsettling trend in the reporting of school violence. The rush to be first with a story seemed to end with the demise of newspaper competition, but the Internet may reinvigorate the urge. News is now available every second of every day from every corner of the country, not to mention the world. Newspapers increasingly update the news on their web sites at frequent intervals as they vie with distant rivals they encounter only on the Internet. There may be a fresh surge of competition as news organizations race to break stories on their web sites, particularly when the well-being of children inside school buildings is threatened. Add this new twist to the continuing competition among the many broadcasters in each locale, and incidents of school violence in the future could be reported potentially in even more troubling fashion than before. These changes in news reporting come at a time when young Americans, those under 30, increasingly do not read print editions of newspapers and may not even watch news shows on television, preferring to get their news-if they care about it at all-from the Internet.


References

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Broder, J.M. (1999, May 9). Searching for answers to school violence. The New
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Brooks, K., Schiraldi, V., & Ziedenberg, J. (2000). School house hype: Two
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Cantor, J., & Nathanson, A.I. (1996, Autumn). Children's fright reactions to
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Curwin, R.L., & Mendler, A.N.(1999, October). Zero tolerance for zero
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Langdon, C., & Vesper, N. (2000, April). The sixth Phi Delta Kappa poll of
teachers' attitudes toward the public schools. Phi Delta Kappan, 81(8), 607-11.


Levine, M. (1996). Viewing violence: How media violence affects your child's
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Pompilio, N. (2000, January/February). Going for the fake. American
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Columbine High School Massacre 

Dylan Klebold, 17, and Eric Harris, 18, had a plan. Obsessed with violent video games and paramilitary techniques, they spent a year collecting an arsenal of semiautomatic guns and homemade bombs with which to perpetrate a crime that the nation would never forget.

Dubbed "the Trenchcoat Mafia" for their habit of wearing black trench coats, the boys had long been bullied and scorned by classmates, so they decided to flex a little muscle. Having no particular reason to live, they decided to kill themselves, but in the process they also wanted to kill as many of their classmates as they could and blow up the school.

The day before their rampage, they sent an email to the local police declaring that their revenge against those who ridiculed them had been accomplished. They blamed parents and teachers for turning their children into intolerant sheep, and then announced their own suicide. It was a bizarre forewarning.

At 11:30 a.m. on April 20, 1999, they hid weapons and bombs beneath their trench coats and then ran through the school, yelling and shooting. When they reached the library, they cornered and killed their largest number of victims before turning their guns on themselves. It all happened quickly, but with devastating impact. After police got into the building, they counted 34 casualties. Fifteen students died in the melee, including the shooters.

Then Harris's diary turned up, which confirmed how elaborately they had planned the shocking event. For over a year, they worked at it, drawing maps, collecting weapons, and devising a system of silent hand signals for coordinating their moves. They'd purchased the guns via Harris's girlfriend at a gun show.

The final report indicated that the two were part of a larger organized network, and that their motives and ideas were intense, but confused. In short, they appeared to have been angry, bitter kids who had access to guns and who were spurred by images of violence to act out their anger against those they most detested---classmates who fit in better than they did.

Yet the Columbine massacre didn't stop there. Not only did a mother of one of the wounded walk into a gun shop and proceed to shoot herself in the head, but a 17-year-old student was jailed for threatening to "finish the job."

In fact, around the country there were a number of copycat overtures that closed down schools in several states, and eventually one of them succeeded.

A Time Line of Recent Worldwide School Shootings 

Feb. 2, 1996 Moses Lake, Wash.

Two students and one teacher killed, one other wounded when 14-year-old Barry Loukaitis opened fire on his algebra class.

March 13, 1996 Dunblane, Scotland

16 children and one teacher killed at Dunblane Primary School by Thomas Hamilton, who then killed himself. 10 others wounded in attack.

Feb. 19, 1997 Bethel, Alaska

Principal and one student killed, two others wounded by Evan Ramsey, 16.

March 1997 Sanaa, Yemen

Eight people (six students and two others) at two schools killed by Mohammad Ahman al-Naziri.

Oct. 1, 1997 Pearl, Miss.

Two students killed and seven wounded by Luke Woodham, 16, who was also accused of killing his mother. He and his friends were said to be
outcasts who worshiped Satan.

Dec. 1, 1997 West Paducah, Ky.

Three students killed, five wounded by Michael Carneal, 14, as they participated in a prayer circle at Heath High School.

Dec. 15, 1997 Stamps, Ark.

Two students wounded. Colt Todd, 14, was hiding in the woods when he shot the students as they stood in the parking lot.

March 24, 1998 Jonesboro, Ark.

Four students and one teacher killed, ten others wounded outside as Westside Middle School emptied during a false fire alarm. Mitchell Johnson, 13, and Andrew Golden, 11, shot at their classmates and teachers from the
woods.

April 24, 1998 Edinboro, Pa.

One teacher, John Gillette, killed, two students wounded at a dance at James W. Parker Middle School. Andrew Wurst, 14, was charged.

May 19, 1998 Fayetteville, Tenn.

One student killed in the parking lot at Lincoln County High School three days before he was to graduate. The victim was dating the ex-girlfriend of his killer, 18-year-old honor student Jacob Davis.

May 21, 1998 Sp