Summary In order to ensure the safety of students during the day, American schools must take more action. Obviously, because the school is not safe, everyone is obliged to participate in blocking daily violence at school. There are many warning signs and ways to prevent this This is a problem of using smarter money and developing more programs to prevent violence before the school breaks out. There is no reason for students to feel dangerous in environments where the government forcibly enforces admission.
Obviously we need to take some measures. Parents, programmers, and civilians must take responsible actions to prevent the spread of violence in society. Violent families, violence against television, violence against movies, and school violence can bring more and more violence to the community in which we live. We are responsible for playing a useful role in curbing the wave of violence and applying the appropriate principles. We will create a safe environment for our society. Families live by violence. We must keep our family safe. Children should feel their world is safe. Providing care and protection is an obvious first step. But parents also need to establish restrictions, ensure emotional safety, and teach values and virtues at home.
As violence increases, the pressure on schools that are safe and orderly also increases. What the school is trying to do. This book provides two interrelated ways: Violence prevention plan and dispute resolution plan. Investigating violence in schools and society and supporting the influence of violence will help you understand why such a plan is necessary. The incidence of violence in schools has increased. During the period 1990 to 1994, the National Cities Alliance found that school violence increased significantly in 33% of member cities (one student died or seriously injured), in 1993-94 in a major city School violence increased 55 times. In over 100,000 cities, 41%. About 10% of teachers and about a quarter of public school pupils say they are victims of school violence (Hamburger 1993). In 1993, one high school alumnus in four people is reported to be threatened with violence (in 1994 "stop violence").