The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Neighborho­od violence hurts many in classroom

- By Moriah Balingit

Researcher­s have shown — and teachers know — that schoolchil­dren exposed to neighborho­od violence can have a tougher time learning, experienci­ng more stress and depression than their peers growing up in safe neighborho­ods.

But a Johns Hopkins University sociologis­t discovered that the consequenc­es of neighborho­od violence reach further than previously known, even spilling over to students who come from safe neighborho­ods. Using crime and student data from Chicago, Julia Burdick-Will linked exposure to neighborho­od violence to a drop in test scores, an effect that extended to students coming from communitie­s that experience­d little or no violence.

“The individual effects may really be the tip of the iceberg ... we could potentiall­y see this effect in schools for more than just the kid who lived around the corner from a homicide,” said Burdick-Will, an assistant professor who studies urban schools. Her findings were published last month in Sociology of Education, an academic journal. “You can detect what seems to be the effect of ... a classmate’s exposure to violence on everyone in the classroom.”

Schools are increasing­ly recognizin­g trauma as a factor that may be derailing learning, with more districts training educators on how to teach students who may be grappling with traumatizi­ng events. And it’s not just violence that can inflict trauma: Unstable family life and natural disasters that upend a student’s life take their toll.

Alex King, a 17-year-old anti-violence activist in Chicago, knows firsthand how community violence can make learning challengin­g. King, who lives in Chicago’s Austin neighborho­od, has grown up surrounded by gun violence. His nephew was fatally shot the day after school let out one year. King helped organize the End of the School Year Peace March and Rally in Chicago last month with survivors of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting, and found out that night that a friend had been killed.

“I’ve been shot at multiple times. I’ve lost family and friends to violence,” King said. “It kind of, like, became a part of life, violence. It’s like something that you can’t escape.”

A recent high school graduate, he plans to head to Grand Valley State University in Michigan.

King recalled being shot at while walking with a group of friends, an incident that left him depressed and frightened. He said some teachers were understand­ing, but he sensed others lacked empathy.

“It was hard for me to focus. My mind was on the incident that occurred and not on school at the time,” he said. “It was a lot of daydreamin­g about what had taken place.”

Burdick-Will analyzed data from freshmen in Chicago Public Schools between 2002 and 2010 and examined their test results over time. Taking into account other factors, she found that classes with greater proportion­s of students from violent neighborho­ods performed worse than classes with fewer such students. Because of Chicago’s school choice policies, students in a single school can come from vastly different

neighborho­ods, allowing Burdick-Will to examine the effects of attending a school with a high proportion of students from violent neighborho­ods.

She hypothesiz­ed that this “peer effect” occurs because students who live in the midst of violence may be more disruptive and less engaged, problems with which teachers have to contend with little assistance from counselors.

“When you have kids who are stressed and potentiall­y responding in exaggerate­d ways or just being upset and traumatize­d and needing the teachers’ attention ... it has an effect on everybody in the classroom,” she said.

Burdick-Will said she hopes her work impels schools to focus more resources on students who return to violent neighborho­ods when they leave the classroom, offering long-term support rather just responding to tragedies.

 ?? ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? A bystander watches as officers respond after shots were fired at and by the police in the Austin neighborho­od early July 4 in Chicago. Neither the suspect or officer was shot during the incident.
ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ / CHICAGO TRIBUNE A bystander watches as officers respond after shots were fired at and by the police in the Austin neighborho­od early July 4 in Chicago. Neither the suspect or officer was shot during the incident.

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