The Signal

Research and School Resource Officers

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Editor’s note: According to the writer, the following was written as a research project on school Saugus High School.

Sending children to school is often a worrisome experience for most mothers and fathers. Increased violence and school shootings that have taken place across the country have a lot of parents opting for home-schooling their children. Others fear the home schooling would be worse without that in-school social experience and would isolate their children or that their child would become socially inept or socially awkward. prevent these types of acts. school campuses reduce that risk?

Ryan Broll and Robin Lafferty (2018) authored a research paper looking at a cross-sectional study in 2006, by the National Center for Education Statistics on behalf of the U.S. Department of Education. The results showed that having school - - cance on the teachers who were trained by the SROs. When those teachers who were trained by the SROs stepped in, then the bullying decreased.

Overall, the study found that more behavior management and violence prevention training for teachers led to less frequent bullying and violence. post-incident method of disciplini­ng of youth. The - ing would more likely prefer a formal resolution, punitive and informal responses. Philip Bolger, - has only increased the referrals to the justice system, which increased the arrests and incarcerat­ion of juveniles.

However, Bolger, Kremser and Walker stated that there were methodolog­ical weaknesses in the studies.

Author Matthew Theriot (2009) did a comparison study of arrests with assigned SROs and those without showing that number of arrests were not impacted by the presence of an SRO, but that it was unclear whether having an SRO on campuses contribute­s to criminaliz­ing student behavior.

Another study reported by Bolger, Kremser and Walker, conducted at Kettering Fairmont High School in Ohio in 2004, found a more positive result of decreased disruptive behaviors, suspension­s and arrests after SRO programs were implemente­d.

- seph McKenna and Shawna White (2018) shows the issues, the outcome is associated with a negative student outcome, such as poor academic performanc­e, truancy and dropouts. The study also has some researcher­s concluding that SROs in school settings are fueling the “school-to-prison enforcer, the student feels they are in prison while - selor or a mentor, the result is more positive and less threatenin­g.

Another study by author Selena Nemorin (2017) chose to look at surveillan­ce as a form of a more electronic policing. The study found that closedcirc­uit television was the most promising form of electronic surveillan­ce versus others out in the world of surveillan­ce. With techniques of surveillan­ce, more schools and communitie­s must take a more realistic look into adding these types of security measures for the schools to keep those students safe.

With school shootings on the rise, violence and bullying, school campuses are becoming more in need of safety and security measures put into place. This is where law enforcemen­t needs to sit down with the stakeholde­rs — principals, teachers, parents and students — for a realistic approach to resolving the problem. Overall, the evidence has shown us that if a law enforcemen­t role is placed would be when the role of an SRO is more of a counselor or a mentor. The evidence points also to a better outcome when the staff is better trained by the SROs.

No one can predict when a school shooting is going to take place. However, by working together for safety and security, law enforcemen­t and the communitie­s in which they serve can open up those lines of communicat­ion to perhaps one day be able to have the ability to stop a school shooting from happening.

Georginale­e McDougal Canyon Country

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