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Working With Youth PDF Print E-mail
Many of you have asked us for help in finding resources for teaching the principles of peacebuilding to youth. We're going to start providing links to some resources on this page. If you know of information or programs you'd like us to add, please let us know. Note that inclusion on this page does not necessarily imply endorsement by The Peace Alliance. Please be sure to do your due diligence before you engage in any program with youth.

 

The Talk It Out Solution
How can you promote safety? Try getting rid of the metal detectors.
By Caralee Adams | November/December 2008
Scholastic Administrator
"What makes for a safe school? Security guards patrolling the hallways? Metal detectors? Zero-tolerance policies? The answer may be none of the above: Educators are searching for new solutions to achieving harmony in the classroom and, surprisingly, they’re increasingly holistic.  Read the rest of the article.

 
Teach Peace
A multitude of great ideas for working with youth of all ages, Teach Peace offers curricula, videos, and even a youth-designed coloring book that helps show the value of a Department of Peace and how anyone, no matter how small, can make a big difference in the world.

 
The Tariq Khamisa Foundation, San Diego, CA
TKF is dedicated to "Stopping Kids from Killing Kids" and breaking the cycle of youth violence by inspiring nonviolent choices and planting seeds of hope for our children's future. Through TKF's school-based nonviolence programs and curriculum, TKF works with elementary, middle, and high school students. TKF teaches them about the realities of gangs, violence, revenge, and the importance of becoming "peacemakers."
 
Assessments of TKF's Violence Impact Forum (VIF), measured by pre-, post- and 45-day post-VIF questionnaires, demonstrate that the VIF causes significant changes in students' beliefs and attitudes toward revenge, violence, gangs and guns. For example, middle school students deemed "high risk" were asked whether or not they agreed the statement "I think being in a gang makes it more likely that you will get hurt or killed" was true for them. Prior to the VIF, 8% agreed it was. Forty-five days following the program, that number had increased to 87%.



Ohio Commission on Dispute Resolution and Conflict, Columbus, OH

Established by the Ohio legislature in 1989, the Commission provides dispute resolution and conflict management resources, training, and direct services to Ohio schools, communities, courts, and state and local government.

The Commission has ample evidence of the efficacy of the programs it identifies and makes available. For example, in the 2002-2003 school year, all schools implementing just one program the Commission sponsored--the SOAR program--showed marked reduction in time dealing with discipline, truancy, tardiness, suspensions and expulsions, and increases in attendance and, not surprisingly, academic performance. At a cost of a mere $12 per student, the program resulted in system-wide savings of more than $300,000--in just one school year.


 

Attitudinal Healing Connection Oakland, CA

The Attitudinal Healing Connection (AHC) works to eliminate violence and fear by creating spiritual and educational programs that incorporate art, health and diversity/social justice in order build peaceful and loving communities. Through their ArtEsteem programs, AHC engages students and supports their positive development-–body, mind, and heart-–helping young people stay interested in school by creating individual and collective educational excellence across academic subjects.

AHC strives in particular to provide art classes in schools that cannot afford them, helping remedy the effects of socioeconomic conditions that can block academic and personal achievement. Participants discover how to self-reflect and dream, as well as focus on tasks and "follow through." Classes also build students' language and math literacy, aesthetic appreciation, and listening and performance skills. Students learn conceptual understandings of social, historical, and cultural topics to engage and inform their minds, and develop the whole child, in expansive ways.


 

Community Conferencing Center, Baltimore, MD

The Community Conferencing Center works to support communities and individuals in realizing they can safely and effectively resolve conflicts themselves. It is the first and only multi-sector program being conducted in a large American inner city, and works with issues related to youth and adult conflict and crime. Through the use of community conferences, the Center brings together the people affected by behavior that has caused serious harm. It provides a forum in which those who have caused harm, those who have been harmed, and their respective supporters can find ways to repair the damage caused and minimize further harm.

Use of community conferencing has resulted in a 60% reduction in recidivism in young offenders compared to similar juvenile justice cases in the traditional juvenile justice system.



Challenge Day, Concord, CA

Challenge Day provides youth and their communities with experiential workshops and programs that demonstrate the possibility of love and connection through the celebration of diversity, truth and full expression. Challenge Day has been featured on the Oprah show and in the documentary, Teen Files: Surviving High School.

Individual schools using the Challenge Day programs have reported a variety of powerful results, including:

  • A reduction in disciplinary incidents ranging from 24% to 67%
  • A 16% reduction in suspensions, from 701 in 2000 to 587 in 2002
  • A 78% decrease in students reporting feeling unsafe at school
  • 17% of participants reported experiencing less teasing, bullying and fewer students being picked on
  • 50% of participants reported an increase in sense of connection, openness, friendliness and knowing people
  • 100% of participants felt there was an adult at school who would listen to them

 

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