Our staff work in partnership with families, schools, and other health professionals to help young people achieve their personal best. We provide a range.

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Presentation transcript:

Our staff work in partnership with families, schools, and other health professionals to help young people achieve their personal best. We provide a range of prevention, assessment, and diagnostic services, as well as counselling, day treatment, transitional support residential and community development / prevention services.

Violence Prevention is NOT a School Issue – It is a community issue that requires a community response – Everyone has a role to play in reducing and eliminating violence, and everyone’s role is critical – Partnerships between schools and community agencies are the ideal model

Not All Violence Prevention Programming Makes Things Better Some programs can even make things worse (boot camp, scared straight) Programming should be intensive, long term and involve people at all levels Programs should be based on current evidence, research and best practices

Addressing Youth Bullying / Dating Violence and Gendered Harassment… We need to be aware of what does not work… Peer Mediation Anger Management Shaming a person out of bullying Punitive consequences Short term Interventions Making the youth being targeted responsible for solving the problem

What works… Creating a school wide bullying prevention plan and giving it time to work. Real change takes time Involve youth in solutions and programming Find alternatives to suspension and expulsion. Give youth who seek power a chance to have it in a positive place. Focus on by-stander culture Never ignore bullying even if subtle and always follow up with all involved (separately) when bullying is reported or identified. Remember that we are the models for the use of power and “children’s capacity for healthy relationships grows out of their relationships with adults” (PrevNet, 2007) Measure program effectiveness and use empirically validated programs.

RISE (Respect In Schools Everywhere) is a youth-engagement violence prevention program.

Core Components of RISE:  Youth-led  Whole school approach to violence prevention  Based on the principles of youth engagement

Youth engagement is the meaningful participation and involvement of youth in an activity with a focus outside of him or herself. Meaningful youth engagement is built on the recognition that every young person has something to contribute to the active betterment of Canadian society. (The Centre of Excellence for Youth Engagement, 2003)

RISE focuses specifically on some of the most pressing issues facing youth today, namely bullying and cyber-bullying RISE focuses specifically on some of the most pressing issues facing youth today, namely bullying and cyber-bullying,

As well as dating violence and sexual/ gender-based harassment

Each Grade 7-10 class in the host high school and “feeder” middle schools receive 2 workshops on the topics. Workshops are facilitated by RISE Reps and a RISE staff.

RISE also conducts school-wide violence prevention activities, such as poster contests, t-shirt logo contests and sports events

In The RISE Program, Youth: Develop and make decisions about programming for their schools Deliver the programming by leading workshops and school-wide initiatives Mentor younger youth Have a platform to have their voices heard Have positive power

RISE - Skill Building Public Speaking / Event Planning Decision Making / How to Run a Meeting Social Skills – Conflict Resolution Multi-media as a way to give youth a voice and connect with other youth (and learn how to use computers, software, video equip)

Developmental Milestones Developing Identity Helping youth see themselves in a different way… as a service provider, not recipient Help them eliminate previous labels and give opportunities to “offset shame”.

Other Developmental Milestones Addressed: Strong Peer Associations Have youth speak to other youth as “when youth speak, other youth listen” Creating a pro-social peer group for youth who are “negative leaders”

The RISE Model addresses the various developmental milestones for adolescents, as true youth engagement should. Risk Taking Exploration -Safe Risks -Public speaking / Challenging Activities

Evaluating RISE Collaborative Process –Researchers and program leaders work together –Identify key questions Research Process Evolves over Time Began with very simple research strategies Developed an understanding of the program Recently initiated a rigorous evaluation

Research strategies for Evaluating RISE Assess student acceptance with workshop evaluation surveys Measure changes in bullying and dating aggression with standardized measures of knowledge and behavior Conduct focus groups with teachers and students at the end of the year

Student Acceptance 83% of students say the workshops were interesting 93% said RISE Reps were well informed 73 % said they learned a lot from the workshops and would use RISE information for themselves or to help a friend

Comparison of students, before and after workshops

Knowledge of Bullying BeforeWorkshop After Workshop Significant change from before to after workshop

Victim of Bullying BeforeWorkshop After Workshop Significant change from before to after workshop

Knowledge About Dating Aggression

Victim of Dating Aggression

Student and Teacher Opinions of RISE Expressed in Focus Groups Conducted at the End of Three Years

RISE Works “Personally I’ve seen fights stop.. that people go in and actually stop it, bystanders. So I think it is making a good impact on the school and it will help..some abuse and bullying and violence” Grade 7 student “I think that the program definitely needs to stay.. because … they’re not going to respond to any other program that ever has come in about bullying and violence” Teacher “I think the kids are starting to feel comfortable about coming forward to adults...We had a student come forward and say… “one of my good friends is in a relationship and I think that he is abusing her” Guidance

Youth Leadership is Critical “..the most important thing is that the workshops are designed and led by kids. And the kids are a very diverse group, pro-social and perpetrators of bullying. Teacher “It’s made a huge difference in the RISE kids, and other students can’t help but watch the changes, and so its really coming from a role-modeling perspective.” Guidance The student led presentation is the most powerful piece of the entire project. Everything else we can work around, but if you take that piece out then it is just going to be another anti-bullying curriculum delivered by a teacher. Teacher

Target Middle Schools “often it is this age group that gets missed, but this is the age where you need to get to them and sometimes even in talking to secondary students, once they are in grade 9, its too late for them” Teacher in Middle School “.. we have students coming into our school as grade 9 students, and it’s great that they have had a connection to kids in our school. It’s helpful to develop the culture of the middle schools, and its also really helpful to develop the culture of our school because we’re bringing in kids that have had that sort of anti-violence message” Teacher in High School

Next Steps with the Research Compare students in schools that do not have the RISE program with students in schools those that do Examine whether the program works in lots of different schools, with different RISE staff Sustainability

Youth Perspectives…

RISE would like to thank our program funders: