High School Violence Targeted in Student-Focused Safety Program
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
 - 12/01/15
 
		
        Two universities and a behavioral research and development  firm will be working together on a five-year project to reduce high school  violence. The Universities of Illinois and Oregon are joining forces with Oregon-based IRIS Educational Media to create a new school  safety intervention program.
"Project SOAR" (Student Ownership, Accountability and  Responsibility) recently received $5.6 million from the Department of Justice's National  Institute of Justice to explore the use of mobile apps to prod high  schoolers to get involved in keeping their school environments safe.
The idea is to help school leaders recognize student  victimization as reported by students who see it happening before it gets to  the point where the victims act out in a desire for revenge. The project will  encompass several aspects: Web- and mobile-based school safety and behavioral  assessments to be taken by students, parents and teachers; a tip line with training  for students; and online training on team-based, restorative problem solving for  teachers.
Student buy-in for the program is essential, said researcher  Dorothy Espelage, an educational psychologist at U Illinois. "Scholars have  argued for greater involvement of youths working closely with school staff to promote  restorative practices and to consider how technology can promote school safety,"  she explained in a statement about the program. "To this aim, Project SOAR  takes a comprehensive approach to school safety in local high schools through working  with youths to give them a voice in developing the project's components."
The program will be tested out in Springfield  Public Schools in Oregon and Danville  School District No. 118 in Illinois.
After a year of research among students and school personnel  to assess their needs, the team of researchers will create and test prototypes  of the SOAR components and collect data at schools implementing the program and  others that don't. A "behavior support team" at each school will coordinate  the deployment and review tip-line data monthly. When behaviors of concern are reported,  the teams will work with selected students to run "restorative justice interventions"  that use dialog, understanding and cooperative problem-solving among the affected  parties.
Final testing of the developed program will run with 4,000  students in both districts starting in 2019.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.