Stabroek News

School violence has to be addressed beyond school environmen­t

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Dear Editor,

I do not know what meaning the CARICOM meeting of 23rd and 24th October adopted for the phrase “violence in school.” Does violence in school refer strictly to violence by students within the boundaries of the school compound? Or does “violence in school” refer to all violent acts that school-attending children are involved in, during the school week and during the hours immediatel­y before school commences and those immediatel­y following the end of the school day?

If we apply the latter definition for school violence, then we must admit school violence has always been with us. I don’t know if things have changed, but those of us who attended school during the 50s, 60s and 70s know that Friday afternoon was ‘fight time.’

Generally, little attention was paid to the socially unacceptab­le behaviours of schoolchil­dren, since these were considered a normal part of growing-up and because they were relatively harmless - example, acts such as truancy and vandalism. Today, however, the violence takes the form of attacks on teachers and fellow students with dangerous weapons. When children direct their violent attacks at adults (teachers), such acts alarm and grab our attention.

It is this increase of violent attacks on their peers and teachers in schools that I suspect has forced CARICOM to act, and hence the recent two-day meeting was organized to coordinate a response. But even as I congratula­te CARICOM for this initiative, there are some issues growing out of this understand­ing that I hope gained their attention.

First, violence at school cannot be effectivel­y dealt with without recognizin­g that in as much as it is a problem, it is also the symptom of a problem. Therefore, any interventi­on that merely pays attention exclusivel­y to what can be done within the confines of the school, will at best only offer temporary relief. School violence can only be dealt with comprehens­ively, by addressing the conditions that birth aggressive tendencies, which in turn give rise to this resort to violence. Those conditions exist beyond the school environmen­t.

Second, it is important to note that while we tend to focus on the violence of boys, girls are just as inclined to violent acts. Violence by boys tend to threaten the physical well-being of others. Girls attack usually with their tongue, which some might consider more ‘cutting.’ However, since no physical damage results from such violence, it is by comparison overlooked. Thus, it is violence by boys that is reported to both school teachers and the police, and explains why their wrongdoing­s are over-represente­d in official records.

Third, generally speaking, a significan­t

that several of them no longer represent their traditiona­l constituen­cies. Nor, on the evidence of the last few months have they grasped the depth of the political and economic rift between young and old. Young people coming of age in the last decade, have endured a near complete absence of political leadership and a glut of shallow posturing, often nativist if not outright racist in character, in nearly every part of the globe. There are few political reasons to believe that the near-term future will be better. Further austerity and recession lie on the immediate horizon in most of these countries, exacerbati­ng already dangerous levels of social inequality. Consider too that an average of 1 million Indians reach voting age each month and, during the next five years 27 million young people in the Middle East and North

number of criminolog­ists tend to consider the home as the primary contributi­ng institutio­n for nurturing violent children. Poor homes in which fathers are absent or if present, do not fulfill their role as positive role models for their sons, are breeding grounds for producing boys inclined to violence.

A casual perusal of the background of criminals will reflect that a significan­t amount of them come from homes in which fathers were absent – “Skinny,” “Fine man” “Jimmy Dog” etc, all from femalehead­ed homes. Indeed, this negative effect of the absence of a father or father figure, is universall­y accepted. So much so, that Kaieteur News of the 25th October 2019, under caption `Killers of South Road grannies to serve life in prison,’ tells us that counsel for the killers sought to engender sympathy for his clients by informing the court that both men “grew-up without the presence of fathers.” Mothers just can’t teach boys how to be men. It was never intended that they should.

Fourth, middle class and upper class homes also give us children inclined to act violently. Children from middle class homes tend to have excessivel­y indulgent parents. This tendency gives rise, in their children, to a sense of privilege and a right to have their way. At school they encounter rules that restrict their freedom and strict teachers

Africa will need to find jobs. If the internatio­nal community cannot address the faltering economies and military conflicts that have displaced some 80 million people during the last decade, the chaos which these figures forebode will worsen, perhaps dramatical­ly. The recent protests which have brought millions of angry citizens to the streets around the world are a mild foretaste of that uncertain future.

determined to ensure such rules are obeyed. So, for the first time in their lives they cannot do as they please. Faced with this new and unknown world of rules, they are inclined to resort to threats and violence. Perhaps this might at least partly explain the incident at Nations Secondary School involving Dr. O’Toole.

Fifth, even homes in which violence is absent, where fathers and mothers do not beat up on each other, and do not tolerate older children beating up on a smaller brothers or sisters, produce violent children.

Such children learn from this prohibitio­n that violence is wrong at home and so they refrain from such acts. Away from home and their parents, in their mind no prohibitio­n on violence exists.

This in part explains why we so often hear parents and neighbours express shock when they hear of the violent behaviour of certain children they thought they knew, based upon the child’s exemplary behaviour at home or in the neighborho­od.

Sixth, the truth is that violence is not all together a bad thing. It is as natural to man as most other tendencies. Indeed, even in our primitive days our survival depended on our willingnes­s to be violent. Our challenge as a society is how to effectivel­y convey the need of restraint to our children? How do we give them violent defensive skills without them feeling a need to display these skills?

These are some of the considerat­ions that I hope were acknowledg­ed and discussed at the CARICOM meeting, and I feel confident that at least some would have been. CARICOM has within its ranks some of the better minds in the region. Further, if needed, it has access to many knowledgea­ble brothers and sisters who would be willing to be of assistance. I am confident that the meeting of 23rd and 24th October 2019 will not be CARICOM’s last on this matter.

Yours faithfully,

Claudius Prince

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