Campus Crime: Influence on the city or provocation by students For most students, university is a time to learn, grow, occasionally participate in parties, and make mistakes. However, in recent years, life on the university campus has made tremendous changes. In addition to worrying about passing the course, students are worried about what their destiny would be if they make a wrong decision and reject the wrong corner. As the home of over 250 university campuses, Boston is a hotbed for infants to experience the first freedom.
"There is no physical campus, instead students study in the travel classroom, the real world becomes their campus.The students live together and use the city library and city laboratory to complete the project Learning is not limited to physical schools only: Minerba School of Emerging College "- Does the educator of Busan in Korea, Yucu Chan teach the dying occupation? Otherwise, the classroom I do not think schools exist in the same form, learning is integrated into virtual reality and multiple perspectives.The students learn how to negotiate problems and exchange ideas. "- Sharon Hadar, Educator of Israeli Lanana
Last year, students nationwide were obliged to respond to the threat of campus security. From campus hate crime to the death of students at the University of Maryland and the University of Texas at Austin, experts do not need to understand why campus safety is more important for future students and their families. This report also analyzes which students feel safest on campus regardless of the crime rate of the university. 80% of the students studied at the Cleveland Conservatory are saying that they are safely living on campus. Edwards Waters College in Florida and Gannon University in Pennsylvania are nearby.
In 1990, in response to the rise in the crime rate at the National University campus, Congress passed the "criminal consciousness and campus security law". The law requires universities to unify campus crime data and report it to the UCR program. On April 5, 1986, when 19-year-old freshman Jeanne Clery at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania went to sleep in the dorm, she was raped and murdered. When Jenny's parents, Connie and Howard investigated the crime, they found that they did not tell the students about 38 violent crimes during the three years before Jenny was murdered. Today, all universities in the campus safety report publish criminal data for use by all students, guardians, and the general public.