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Valentine, Charles F. – 1978
New Jersey's Vineland High School North faced many behavioral and vandalism problems during its first year of operation (1976-77) and adopted a program to improve this situation during its second year. This effort involved adoption and thorough dissemination of student rules, a series of parent orientation meetings, a new community information…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Change Strategies, Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems
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Warren, James H.; Rubenow, Robert C. – NASSP Bulletin, 1984
A program for reducing school vandalism must combine supervision by staff, constructive punishment for those involved in vandalism, and the development of student and staff pride in the school through extensive involvement of students. (MJL)
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, School Administration, School Security, School Vandalism
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Massucci, Joseph D. – NASSP Bulletin, 1984
Measures taken by a Catholic high school decreased both vandalism occurring during school hours and vandalism occurring when the school was unoccupied. Among tactics used were increased monitoring by teachers, greater emphasis on the value of respect for others and for property, and installation of an extensive alarm system. (MJL)
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Discipline Policy, School Administration, School Security
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Harlan, John P.; McDowell, Charles P. – Educational Studies, 1981
Describes public school responses to crime and student delinquency in terms of behavioral expectations. The authors conclude that school discipline policies are often based more on the fear of violence, disruptive behavior, and unpredictable situations than on actual incidents. (AM)
Descriptors: Crime, Delinquent Behavior, Discipline Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
New Jersey State Dept. of Education, Trenton. – 1979
New Jersey's state board of education formed a task force in 1978 to conduct a six-month study of the effectiveness of various strategies for reducing violence and vandalism in the schools. The forty-seven recommendations developed by the task force were of three types: those designed to improve state-level capabilities (areas addressed included…
Descriptors: Crime, Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems, Elementary Secondary Education
Phillip, Mary-Christine – Black Issues in Higher Education, 1993
Campus vandalism has become extremely costly for colleges and universities. Most vandalism occurs on weekends and during special events and is committed by both students and outsiders. Its results affect the entire campus community, either immediately or in increased costs. Successful preventive measures include penalties, police patrols, and good…
Descriptors: College Buildings, College Environment, Costs, Crime Prevention
Morgenstern, Robert E. – 1980
A contemporary theory of behavior is that faulty patterns of thinking divide the criminal from the noncriminal. The causation of school violence is children choosing to be violent; and the problem of school violence is acceptance of their choice. Short-term control measures are adherence to systematic school rules, use of technology, security…
Descriptors: Alarm Systems, Behavior Theories, Commercial Television, Criminal Law
Arsulich, Michael – 1979
The nature of school discipline problems has changed over the past few decades. In the 1950s, teachers thought that fighting, stealing, and disrespect toward authority were the most serious forms of student misbehavior. Violent assaults on teachers and pupils, gang warfare, burglary, extortion, and destruction of school property are included among…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Change Strategies, Corporal Punishment, Delinquency Causes
Deaver, Philip – 1976
This paper was prepared by members of the National Community Education Association's Committee on Violence and Vandalism in the Schools as a review of the literally hundreds of pounds of information, research, and news generated on this topic. The purpose of this review is to indicate how community education coordinators and directors can…
Descriptors: Community Education, Crime, Delinquency, Discipline Policy
Clegg, Roger – 1984
Documented effects of relaxed school disciplinary standards show the need for implementation of strict, consistent disciplinary measures. Poor school discipline endangers students and staff, contributes to teacher burnout, hinders student education, costs taxpayers, and encourages criminality both in and out of school. Students rights advocates…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Costs, Court Litigation, Crime
Foundation for Educational Administration, Burlingame, CA. – 1982
This guide has been prepared to assist school districts in self-appraisal of their policies governing discipline and control of violence and vandalism, and also to facilitate the development of new policies by providing model policies and procedures implemented in other school districts. Accordingly, the first section lists guidelines for policies…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Behavior Standards, Codes of Ethics, Delinquency Prevention