Identifying Troubled Youth - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

Identifying Troubled Youth

Description:

Inappropriate access to, possession of, and use of firearms. Serious threats of violence ... Diana Browning Wright, DCS 2002. Intensive social skills teaching ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:719
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: www5E
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Identifying Troubled Youth


1
Identifying Troubled Youth
  • Presented By Cody Huie

2
Seminar Goals
  • Define troubled youth and discuss risk factors
    and warning signs.
  • Discuss school violence.
  • Discuss threat-assessment and intervention
    strategies.
  • Review model prevention/intervention programs.

3
Troubled Youth
  • Students who are at risk for violence towards
    themselves (i.e., suicide) or others (i.e.,
    homicide).
  • These students require either secondary or
    tertiary mental health intervention in their
    schools and/or collaborative efforts with
    community mental health professionals.

4
Risk Factors Primary Grades
  • Being Male
  • Substance abuse
  • Aggression
  • Low intelligence
  • Antisocial Parents
  • Poverty
  • Psychological Conditions
  • Weak social ties
  • Antisocial behaviors, attitudes, beliefs, and
    peers
  • Exposure to TV violence
  • Poor School Performance
  • Abusive parents
  • Poor Parent-Child Relationships
  • Broken Homes
  • U.S. Dept of Health and Human Services, 2001

5
Risk Factors Secondary Grades
  • Crimes against persons
  • Family conflict
  • Academic failure
  • Physical violence
  • Neighborhood crime
  • Gang membership
  • Risk-taking behavior
  • Poor parental monitoring
  • U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, 2001

6
Early Warning Signs
  • Social Withdrawal
  • Excessive feelings of isolation and being alone
  • Excessive feelings of rejection
  • Being a victim of violence
  • Feelings of being picked on
  • Low school interest and poor academic performance
  • Expression of violence in writings or drawings
  • Uncontrolled anger
  • Impulsive and chronic hitting, intimidating,
    bullying
  • History of discipline problems
  • Early Warning Signs A Guide to Safe Schools

7
Early Warnings Signs cont.
  • Past history of violent and aggressive behavior
  • Intolerance for differences and prejudicial
    attitudes
  • Drug and alcohol use
  • Affiliation with gangs
  • Inappropriate access to, possession of, and use
    of firearms
  • Serious threats of violence
  • Early Warning Signs A Guide to Safe Schools

8
Imminent Warning Signs
  • Serious physical fighting with peers or family
    members
  • Severe destruction of property
  • Severe rage for seemingly minor reasons
  • Detailed threats of lethal violence
  • Other self-injurious behaviors or threats of
    suicide
  • Early Warning Signs A Guide to Safe Schools

9
Risk Factors of Youth Suicide
  • Psychopathological Disorders
  • Familial Factors
  • Biological Factors
  • Environmental Factors
  • Situational Crises
  • Davis and Brock, 2002

10
Warning Signs of Youth Suicide
  • Suicide Threats (direct or indirect)
  • Suicide plan, method, and means
  • Previous attempts
  • Making final arrangements
  • Symptoms of depression

11
Targeted Violence
  • Violence in which the perpetrator and the
    target(s) are identified or identifiable prior to
    the incident.
  • Borum, Fein, Vossekuil, Berglund, 1999
  • Planned attacks
  • The U.S. Secret Service

12
Risk Factors Targeted Violence
  • Students at risk for targeted violence may or may
    not possess many of the traditional risk factors
    associated with delinquency and general violence.
    (Reddy et al., 2001)
  • Juveniles that committed homicides were less
    likely to
  • Have had problems with school adjustment
  • Have prior mental health difficulties
  • Have prior arrests or placement in juvenile
    detention facilities
  • Have histories of prior violent behavior than
    those youths convicted of assault

13
School Crisis Events
  • School Violence
  • Continuum ranging from teasing, harassment or
    bullying (verbal physical), suicide, and
    homocide.

14
School Crisis Events
  • Reminder
  • It is imperative that school staff should be
    trained to spot signs of suicide and violence and
    informed of their duty to intervene.

15
Effective Strategies
16
Effective Strategies
  • Primary Prevention Strategies
  • Proactive strategies aimed at lowering the rate
    of troubled youth.
  • Secondary Prevention Strategies
  • Strategies that will help schools identify,
    refer, and intervene with students that are at
    risk for violence.
  • Tertiary Prevention Strategies
  • Multi-agency wrap-around services aimed to meet
    individual needs.

17
Primary Prevention
  • School-Wide or Curricular Approaches
  • The goal of such approaches is to provide an
    environment that develops and nurtures emotional
    healthy students.
  • Availability and Development of School Mental
    Health resources

18
Components/Tasks for Safe School Climate
  • Assessment of schools emotional climate.
  • Emphasis on the importance of listening.
  • Strong but caring stance on the code of silence
  • Prevention/Intervention of bullying
  • Plan, create, and sustain a culture of safety and
    respect
  • Development of trusting relationships between
    each student and at least one adult
  • Threat Assessments In Schools

19
Characteristics of a Safe Physical Environment
  • Supervising access to the buildings and grounds
  • Reducing class size and school size
  • Minimize time spent in hallway or dangerous
    locations
  • Building safety audit
  • Closing school campus during lunch
  • Arranging supervision in critical times
  • Prohibit students from congregating
  • Having adults visibly present throughout the
    school
  • Stagger dismissal times and lunch periods
  • Coordinating with local police to ensure safe
    flow to and from school
  • Early Warning Signs A Guide to Safe Schools

20
Secondary Prevention
  • Despite the efforts of primary prevention
    programs some students will develop problems that
    lead to other- and self-directed violence.

21
Identification, Referral, and Risk Assessment
  • All school staff must be trained to identify the
    warning signs of potentially troubled youth, and
    a procedure must be in place for students, staff,
    and parents to refer troubled youth for
    intervention and support.
  • Once referred the procedure must include
    provisions for risk assessment to determine the
    degree of risk the student poses.

22
Risk Assessment
  • Traditional approaches to risk assessment
  • Behavioral Profiling
  • Guided professional or structured clinical
    assessment
  • Including use of warning signs and other
    checklists
  • Automated decision making (use of actuarial
    formulas)

23
Threat Assessment
  • Is a process of identifying, assessing, and
    managing individuals who pose a threat.
  • Focuses on the facts of a specific case.
  • Closely examines the progression of the ideas
    and planning behavior over time.
  • Corroborates information gained in a case through
    multiple sources.

24
What is a threat?
  • Making a threat
  • Communicating intent to harm oneself or others.
  • Posing a threat
  • Engaging in behaviors that comprise a plan to
    harm oneself or others.
  • Motivations for threats (Table 4)
  • Types of Threats
  • Direct Threat
  • Indirect Threat
  • Veiled Threat
  • Conditional Threat

25
Threat Assessment Models
  • U.S. Secret Service Model
  • Behavioral-Based Approach
  • Guiding Principles
  • There is no single type of perpetrator of
    targeted violence.
  • There is a distinction between posing a threat
    and making a threat.
  • Targeted violence is often a product of an
    understandable and discernable pattern of
    behavior and thinking.
  • FBI Model
  • Trait Based-Approach
  • The purpose is to determine the level of risk
    based on answers to the following questions
  • How credible/serious is the threat?
  • To what extent does the student making the threat
    have the resources, intent, and motivation to
    carry it out?
  • This threat-assessment model also proposes data
    in the following four areas to make the risk
    assessment
  • Student personality
  • Family dynamics
  • School dynamics
  • Social dynamics

26
Secret Service Threat-Assessment Model
  • The Process
  • Gathering Preliminary Data
  • Review cumulative records
  • Brief interviews with teachers
  • Community Agencies
  • Mental health
  • Probation
  • Child protective services
  • Interviewing the student at risk
  • Intent is to gather the students perceptions of
    the events.
  • Possible Questions Table 2
  • Interview third parties
  • Possible Questions Table 3
  • Recent writings can also be reviewed for themes
    of depression, desperation, murder, suicide, and
    interest in weapons.

27
FBI Threat Assessment Model
  • Levels of Risk
  • Low Level of Threat
  • Threat is vague and indirect
  • Threat lacks realism
  • Content of the threat suggests person is unlikely
    to carry it out
  • Medium Level of Threat
  • More concrete and realistic
  • Wording suggests that the threatener has given
    thought to the act
  • There is a general indication of possible place
    and time
  • There is no strong indication of preparation
    though there be a veiled reference or vague
    evidence indicating planning
  • May be a specific statement indicating the
    threat is not empty
  • High Level of Threat
  • Threat is direct, specific, and plausible
  • Threat suggests concrete steps have been taken

28
FBI Threat-Assessment Model
  • The Four-Pronged Assessment Model
  • Personality of the Student
  • Family Dynamics
  • School Dynamics
  • Social Dynamics

29
Implementing a Threat Assessment Program
  • School district develops policies and procedures.
  • Inform parents students of policy procedures.
  • Designate a Threat Assessment Coordinator.
  • Develop a multidisciplinary team.
  • School Administrators
  • Teachers
  • Law Enforcement officials
  • Parents
  • Community Agencies and Organizations

30
Early Intervention
  • Responding to at-risk youths (Table 5)
  • Staff should meet to review needs of their
    at-risk students twice a year.
  • Once strategies are implemented, provisions must
    be made to monitor progress and modify initial
    interventions if needed.

31
Early Interventions
  • Responding to high-risk youths
  • Procedures must be in place to provide immediate
    intervention if a student is judged at high-risk
    for violence. (Table 6)
  • Response must be immediate.
  • Hold an informal process until a formal meeting
    can be held. (Table 7)

32
Suicide Intervention Model
  • Conduct a suicide risk assessment
  • Notify parents
  • Provide referrals
  • Follow up and support the student and their
    family
  • Referral for psycho-educational assessment
  • Individualizing classroom arrangements
  • Assigning peer tutor
  • Reducing academic demand
  • Participating in conflict or anger management
    programs
  • Participating in extracurricular activities
  • Directing family to appropriate community
    agencies

33
Tertiary Prevention
  • Multi-agency effort
  • School district, community mental health, law
    enforcement, probation, etc.
  • Each agency considers the resources available and
    develops a individualized intervention plan.
  • School mental health professionals should
    communicate with community-based mental health
    providers.
  • Close communication between school and care
    provider.

34
Secret Service Recommendations
  • Consistent and coordinated message that violence
    is not permitted.
  • Make youth aware that investigation is taking
    place and violence will be stopped.
  • Elicit subject cooperation in being monitored by
    law enforcement.
  • Importance of mental health intervention
    consistently reinforced by everyone involved with
    the student.

35
Model Program
  • Safeguarding Our Children An Action Guide (Dwyer
    Osher 2000)
  • Based on three components
  • Provides school wide foundation for all students
    through prevention programs.
  • Early intervention for at-risk students
  • Provisions for intensive services targeting
    high-risk students.

36
Positive Behavior Support
37
Three-Tiered Model of School-Wide Discipline
Strategies1
  • Intensive social skills teaching
  • Individual behavior management plans
  • Parent training and collaboration
  • Multi-agency collaboration (wrap-around)

Targeted/ Intensive
(High-risk Students) Individual
Interventions (3-5 of students)
  • Intensive social skills teaching
  • Self-management programs
  • Adult mentors (checking in)
  • Increased academic support

Selected
(At-risk Students) Classroom and Small Group
Strategies (7-10 of students)
Universal
  • Social skills teaching
  • Positive, proactive discipline
  • Teaching school behavior expectations
  • Active supervision and monitoring
  • Positive reinforcement systems
  • Firm, fair, and corrective discipline

(All Students) School-wide Systems of
Support (85-90 of students)
1Reprinted with permission of Sprague, J. and
Walker, H. (1999) Institute on Violence and
Destructive Behavior
Diana Browning Wright, DCS 2002
HHp1.2
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com