pREVENCION VIOLENCIA ESCUELA PDF
pREVENCION VIOLENCIA ESCUELA PDF
pREVENCION VIOLENCIA ESCUELA PDF
VIOLENCE PREVENTION
A practical handbook
a
School-based violence prevention: a practical handbook
ISBN 978-92-4-151554-2
© World Health Organization 2019
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Preface
Each year up to 1 billion children experience some form of physical, sexual or psychological
violence or neglect. Being a victim of violence in childhood has lifelong impacts on education,
health, and well-being. Exposure to violence can lead to educational underachievement due
to cognitive, emotional, and social problems. Because children who are exposed to violence
are more likely to smoke, misuse alcohol and drugs, and engage in high-risk sexual behaviour,
they are also more likely to endure a range of illnesses later in life. These include depression,
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer and HIV.
Given this reality, preventing violence against children is squarely on the international
development agenda. Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target 5.1 calls for the elimination of
all forms of violence against girls, and SDG target 16.2 calls for ending all forms of violence against
children. Access to education is equally prominent within the SDGs, with SDG target 4.a to build
and upgrade education facilities that provide safe, non-violent learning environments for all.
Many efforts are underway that would help to achieve these goals. These activities take place
in various settings. Schools have been identified as one important setting for conducting
violence prevention efforts. Therefore, in early 2019, with support from several of its affiliated
organizations, the Global Partnership to End Violence against Children launched the “Safe
to Learn” initiative focused specifically on ending violence against children in schools. The
activities promoted as part of this initiative complement current work countries are doing to
implement the evidence-based technical package INSPIRE: seven strategies for ending violence
against children. Enhancing access to education and providing life skills training through
schools form one of the seven strategies.
In schools, the provision of education and organized activities are themselves powerful
protection against violence. In addition, it is in these settings that opportunities arise to shape
attitudes and norms about the acceptability of violence, alcohol and drug use, the carrying
of weapons onto school grounds and other risks. In turn, preventing violence in the broader
society can directly benefit the core aim of schools to educate children, foster high-quality
lifelong learning, and empower leaners to be responsible global citizens.
This new resource: School-based violence prevention: a practical handbook, is about schools,
education and violence prevention. It provides guidance for school officials and education
authorities on how schools can embed violence prevention within their routine activities and
across the points of interaction schools provide with children, parents and other community
members. If implemented, the handbook will contribute much to helping achieve the SDGs
and other global health and development goals.
Reflecting the importance of school-based violence prevention, this handbook was produced
by WHO, in collaboration with UNESCO and UNICEF. We invite you to join us in acting to
increase the number and effectiveness of school-based violence prevention activities to ensure
the safety, well-being and happiness of children and their parents and caregivers everywhere.
Etienne Krug
Director, Department for Management of Noncommunicable Diseases,
Disability, Violence and Injury Prevention
i
Acknowledgements
This handbook was written by Sara Wood, Karen Hughes and Mark Bellis from the WHO
Collaborating Centre on Investment for Health and Well-being at Public Health Wales and
Berit Kieselbach from the World Health Organization. Substantial contributions were made
by Christophe Cornu, Jenelle Babb and Joanna Herat (UNESCO), Stephen Blight, Songha
Chae, Masue Suzuki, Rocio Aznar Daban, Anna Azaryeva Valente, Clarice da Silva e Paula, and
Theresa Kilbane (UNICEF), Alexander Butchart, Stephanie Burrows (WHO) and Khadijah Fancy.
The document was edited by Ruth Morton (Plain English Campaign) and proof-read by
Amanda Germanio (WHO). Claire Scheurer (WHO) provided administrative support.
The document has also benefitted greatly from comments and suggestions provided by the
following peer reviewers: Cathy Ward, Sujata Bordoloi, Soraya Lester, Jenny Parkes, Angela
Nakafeero and Sarah Lindstrom Johnson.
The conceptual foundations for this document were outlined in a December 2015 expert
consultation on school-based violence prevention. Consultation participants included: Sujata
Bordoloi, Patrick Burton, Karen Devries, Michael Dunne, Manuel Eisner, Khadija Fancy, Erika
Fraser, Joanna Herat, Berit Kieselbach, Theresa Kilbane Ha Le Hai, Soraya Lester, Ersilia
Mensini, Dipak Naker, Jenny Parkes, Francisco Quesney, Christina Salmivalli, Catherine Ward
and Sara Wood.
The Know Violence in Childhood Initiative, in particular Ramya Subrahmanian and Patrick
Burton, provided extensive support in convening the first expert meeting and sharing evidence
from the research work of Know Violence.
ii
Contents
Introduction 2
Section 4: Work with teachers on values and beliefs and train them
in positive discipline and classroom management 35
References 62
Introduction
Interpersonal violence (Box 1) affects the lives of millions of children across the world. Up to
50% of all children aged 2 to 17 years are thought to have been affected by a form of violence
(physical, sexual or emotional abuse) in the past year – the equivalent of 1 billion children (Hillis
et al, 2016). Experiences of violence, particularly in childhood, can damage children’s physical
and mental health and affect their whole lives (Figure 1). Violence can also affect educational
outcomes and children’s potential to lead successful and prosperous lives. Schools are in
a unique position to address and prevent violence against children. Not only are schools
accountable in ensuring that their premises are safe and protective but they can also take an
active role in engaging the community on issues related to violence. This can include violence
that takes place in schools, such as physical violence, sexual violence, bullying, and corporal
punishment. It can also include types of violence that emerge in the home and community,
such as child maltreatment, dating and intimate-partner violence and elder abuse.
2
2 Introduction
State Parties shall take all appropriate legislative, administrative, social and educational measures
to protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse, neglect or
negligent treatment, maltreatment or exploitation, including sexual abuse, while in the care of
parent(s), legal guardian(s) or any other person who has the care of the child.
How to deal with three main concerns: lack of time, know-how and
resources?
Problem: Three of the barriers that schools often face when considering how to prevent
violence are a lack of time, know-how and a lack of resources.
Solution: Activities aimed at preventing violence do not need to be time-consuming or costly;
many of the recommendations made in this handbook can be put in place with a reasonable
effort, or may already be in place as part of other initiatives. Having a school management
that recognizes the value of preventing violence and that leads, motivates and supports staff
to achieve a shared vision is more important than having a lot of time or resources.
Suggested action: You can adapt existing systems, resources and skills to include evidence-
based violence prevention strategies.
Introduction 3
3
Box 1: Forms of interpersonal violence covered by this handbook
Interpersonal violence is violence that happens between one person and another.
There are many forms, including the following:
Child maltreatment (including violent punishment) involves physical, sexual and
psychological/emotional violence; and neglect of infants, children and adolescents
by parents, caregivers and other authority figures, most often in the home but also
in settings such as schools and orphanages.
Bullying (including online bullying) is unwanted aggressive behaviour by another
child or group of children who are neither siblings nor in a romantic relationship
with the victim. It involves repeated physical, psychological or social harm, and often
takes place in schools and other settings where children gather, and online.
Youth violence is concentrated among those aged 10–29 years, occurs most often
in community settings between acquaintances and strangers, includes physical
assault with weapons (such as guns and knives) or without weapons, and may
involve gang violence.
Intimate partner violence (or domestic violence) involves violence by an
intimate partner or ex-partner. Although males can also be victims, intimate partner
violence disproportionately affects females. It commonly occurs against girls within
child and early/forced marriages. Among romantically involved but unmarried
adolescents it is sometimes called “dating violence”.
Sexual violence includes non-consensual completed or attempted sexual contact;
non-consensual acts of a sexual nature not involving contact (such as voyeurism or
sexual harassment); acts of sexual trafficking committed against someone who is
unable to consent or refuse; and online exploitation.
Emotional or psychological violence and witnessing violence includes
restricting a child’s movements, denigration, ridicule, threats and intimidation,
discrimination, rejection and other non-physical forms of hostile treatment.
Witnessing violence can involve forcing a child to observe an act of violence, or the
incidental witnessing of violence between two or more other persons.
Corporal punishment: is any punishment in which physical force is used and
intended to cause pain or discomfort, however light. Most corporal punishment
involves hitting (‘smacking’, ‘slapping’, ‘spanking’) children with the hand or with an
implement – whip, stick, belt, shoe, and so on. But it can also involve, for example,
kicking, shaking or throwing children, scratching, pinching, burning or scalding them
or forcing them to swallow food or liquid.
When directed against girls or boys because of their biological sex, sexual
orientation or gender identity, any of these types of violence can also constitute
gender-based violence.
Sources: World Health Organization, 2016a; UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, 2006
4
4 Introduction
The handbook will guide practitioners towards a whole school approach of preventing violence,
with step-by-step tips on how to do so. The following sections outline important elements in
establishing a comprehensive approach to violence prevention in schools:
Collect data on violence and monitor changes over time (Section 2);
Work with teachers on values and beliefs and train them in positive discipline and
classroom management (Section 4);
Evaluate violence prevention activities and use the evidence to strengthen your
approach (Section 9).
Introduction 5
5
Figure 1: The effect of violence on health
s
lem
p rob Inj
lth ur
ea Suicide Head y
lh injury
ta Internal
en
injury
M
Depression Fractures
and Assault
anxiety
Burns
Post
Traumatic
Stress
Disorder
GAINST C
EA
Stroke
Death
behaviours
HI
C
(including
VIOLEN
LD
Chronic
lung
Unintended disease
Materna
nd risk
and Heart
adolescent disease
pregnancy Obesity
se a
l and
isea
chil
Physical Alcohol
le d
inactivity
d
hea
ab
Pregnancy Alcohol
complications
n ic
and drugs
lth
STDs
mu
HIV
m
Smoking
co
on
N
Unsafe
sexual Multiple
practices partners
Com
urs
mun
icable b e havio
disease and risk
Source: World Health Organization, 2016a. Blue circles indicate a direct effect. White circles indicate an indirect effect through the
adoption of high-risk behaviours..
6
6 Introduction
How to use this handbook
This handbook does not aim to give readers an overview about everything schools can
do to prevent violence, but instead covers some of the core activities school officials and
district education authorities can consider to initiate addressing violence at school level or to
strengthen existing interventions. For additional resources, see manuals by UNESCO, UNGEI,
UNICEF, and WHO, which are referred to throughout this book.
The handbook is built around a list of suggested areas for implementation (see page 10)
that outlines practical school-based interventions to take when putting violence prevention
measures in place in all areas of the school. The core actions refer to a set of initiatives that
practitioners who are at school level can take directly. They are immediate activities that the
coordinating team can already kick-off.
In addition to these, the set of expanded actions are recommended actions to take beyond
the school level, usually involving additional stakeholders and higher-level decision-makers
for the benefit of the entire education system, e.g. the integration of violence prevention into
national curricula for teacher training.
In putting in place a ‘whole school’ approach to preventing violence, it is important to consider
all the sections in this handbook and all the areas covered in the table. However, if some of the
suggested methods are already in place and the reader would like to strengthen a particular
area, for example evaluation, start in these sections first.
This handbook uses the term “parents” to mean parents, guardians and caregivers, and the
terms ‘children’ to mean children and adolescents up to the age of 18.
Introduction 77
Figure 2: A whole-school approach to violence prevention
SECTION 5
SECTION 4
Respond to violen
when it happens
Work with teachers on values and
beliefs and train them in positive
discipline and classroom management
SECTION 3
Prevent violence through
curriculum-based activities
SECTION 2
Collect data on violence
and monitor changes
over time
SECTION 1
Getting started: Develop
leadership, school policies
and coordination methods
8
8 Introduction
SECTION 6
nce Review and adapt school
buildings and grounds
SECTION 7
Involve parents in
violence prevention
activities
SECTION 8
Involve the community
SECTION 9 in violence prevention
Evaluate violence prevention activities
activities and use the evidence
to strengthen your approaches
Introduction 9
9
Areas of implementation
CORE ACTIONS EXPANDED ACTIONS
(SCHOOL LEVEL) (DISTRICT OR NATIONAL LEVEL)
1
team to address violence. of the day-to-day work of the school, and
• Strengthen knowledge and skills of the work towards building a school culture
coordinating team. that does not tolerate violence.
• Develop a school policy that condemns
Getting started: violence and is enforced fairly for
Develop leader everyone.
• Develop an action plan.
ship, school
policies and
coordination
methods
SECTION • Use data from existing surveys to • Include questions that measure violence in
2
increase understanding about where, existing school surveys and an Education
when, how and by whom violence Management Information System (EMIS).
happens. • Carry out surveys to assess the extent of
• Establish a record-keeping system of violence, where and when it takes place,
Collect data on incidents of violence and the school’s the characteristics of those involved and
responses to these. perceptions of violence.
violence and • Make sure that data is kept confidential
monitor changes within the school.
over time
SECTION • Test evidence-based violence prevention • If the evaluation finds that the tested
3
strategies on a small scale e.g. in one violence prevention strategies were
grade or class. Strategies that have effective in reducing violence, take steps
proven to be effective include: to scale it up:
–– Develop children’s life skills –– Scale-up the effective strategies to
Prevent –– Teach children about safe behaviour other classes/grades within the school
violence through and protecting themselves from –– Share your model with other schools
abuse –– Showcase your model and propose
curriculum-based –– Challenge and transform social, with the Ministry of Education
activities cultural and gender norms that integrating it as part of the curriculum
justify violence and promote equal
relationships
–– Address key risk factors for violence
(alcohol, drugs, low academic
achievement)
SECTION • Train teachers in positive discipline and • Integrate training in positive discipline
4
classroom management. and classroom management and social,
• Create mutual support mechanisms for cultural and gender norms in pre-service
teachers. training for teachers.
• Strengthen managerial support for
Work with teachers teachers.
on values and • Address and transform teachers’ harmful
beliefs and social, cultural and gender
beliefs and train norms.
them in positive
discipline and
classroom
management
10
10 Areas of implementation
CORE ACTIONS EXPANDED ACTIONS
(SCHOOL LEVEL) (DISTRICT OR NATIONAL LEVEL)
SECTION • Train teachers and school staff in • Strengthen safe and child-friendly
5
recognizing violence and asking children reporting methods.
in a responsible way about violence. • Develop and strengthen appropriate
• Train teachers in managing situations referral methods for victims of violence
where children tell them they have who need additional support.
Respond to experienced violence. • Monitor the effectiveness of reporting and
• Deal with violent incidents immediately, referral methods.
violence when using methods learned in teachers’
it happens training, for example positive discipline
and classroom management (Section 5).
• If referral mechanisms do not exist at
school level, make sure to be informed of
service providers available
• Train parents in recognizing and asking
appropriately about violence and
supporting children exposed to violence
(see also Section 8).
SECTION • Involve students and staff in identifying • Ensure that the annual budget includes
6
hotspots for violence (including the way a budget line for improving physical
to and from school) and find practical infrastructure of schools with the aim to
solutions in these areas. enhance safety of children.
• Review the appearance and features
Review and adapt of school buildings and grounds and
identify areas that could be improved.
school buildings • Make sure schools have clean, separate
and grounds toilets for boys and girls.
7
about violence prevention activities and and work with parents to improve key
school policies on violent behaviour. parenting skills and encourage non-violent
• Distribute messages on how parents can strategies for dealing with challenging
support their child’s learning. behaviour.
Involve parents in • Invite parents to sit on prevention
coordinating committees.
violence prevention • Create awareness among parents on how
activities to recognize and ask appropriately about
violence.
8
bodies such as community violence organizations, agencies or services that
prevention committees. support violence prevention activities,
• Involve community members in school- including after-school clubs.
based coordinating committees and • Open the school as a place where joint
Involve the developing school policies and codes of community activities can take place.
conduct.
community in
violence prevention
activities
SECTION • Decide on a set of outcome indicators, • Work with academic institutions or other
9
using existing indicator frameworks partners to establish whether violence
where possible, that can help you to prevention activities work.
understand whether your actions to • Include outcome indicators on the
prevent violence have been successful, effectiveness of violence prevention
Evaluate violence and include these measures in evaluation measures into broader monitoring and
activities. evaluation systems that collect data on
prevention violence and the response to violence in
activities and use schools, for example into surveys that are
the evidence to conducted regularly.
strengthen your
approaches
Areas of implementation 11
11
Section 1: Getting started:
SECTION 1
Getting started: Develop
Develop leadership, school
leadership, school policies
and coordination methods
policies and coordination
methods
This chapter outlines a framework that will help guide actions to prevent and respond to
violence in schools. It covers leadership, action planning and coordination structures.
12
12 Section 1: Getting started: Develop leadership, school policies and coordination methods
2. Create awareness in the school community and a culture that does
not accept violence
A formal event to launch the programme of activities can be a good way of helping to raise
awareness about violence in the school community and can create a sense of responsibility
among teachers, students, parents and the community. A regular school event or a special
occasion that is created for this purpose can mark a change in how you deal with violence at
your school. It is important to promote the event widely. Sometimes the event might get more
interest if you invite a special guest who is recognized within the community. The purpose of the
event should be to officially present your aim to create a school community where everybody
feels valued, respected and safe and where violence is not tolerated. It should also highlight the
important role the school can play also in addressing violence beyond the school grounds. You
can involve students through creating plays, songs, speeches and stories. The event can also be
a suitable opportunity to recruit interested stakeholders onto the coordinating team (see next
point). You could repeat the event each year, for example at the beginning of each school year.
You could also consider a separate event for teachers and school staff, for example during
teacher reunions to look at standards and values held by teachers that support violence,
including sexual violence (see also pre- and in-service teacher trainings under Section 4).
Section 1: Getting started: Develop leadership, school policies and coordination methods 13
13
4. Strengthen capacity of the coordinating team
It is important to develop the skills of the coordinating team and all those who put in place
violence prevention measures at school.
First, team members need to know the most common types of violence, the risk factors
for violence, and the evidence on what works to prevent it. This information will help make
informed decisions about the next steps.
Secondly, it is also important to explore the team’s own ideas and misconceptions about why
violence is happening.
And finally, the team should be aware of existing international rights and agreements, national
legislation, and codes of conduct.
A standard training session addressing all the above areas would be helpful. It can be part
of the induction package once a member is selected to be part of the coordinating team and
it can be conducted regularly as refresher sessions. Coordinating teams may find it useful
to contact equivalent teams in neighbouring schools to share learning and resources and
provide mutual support.
The South African National School Safety Famework (NSSF) was endorsed by
the Department of Basic Education in order to provide an all-inclusive strategy to
guide the national department as well as the provincial education departments in a
coordinated effort to address violence occurring within schools.
The NSSF is a tool through which minimum standards for safety at school can
be established, implemented and monitored and for which schools, districts and
provinces can be held accountable.
It consists of a manual that describes the framework, including national policies,
the roles and responsibilities of various stakeholders in assuring safety at school
and a 9-step-process to implement the manual. There is also a training guide for
facilitators, disciplinary codes and training materials.
Source: http://www.cjcp.org.za/nssf-manual.html
14
14 Section 1: Getting started: Develop leadership, school policies and coordination methods
The school policy should:
• Be guided by and in line with international standards and national policies that look at
violence in schools and violence prevention.
• Be clear about the types of violence that are addressed (violence between students and
violence between teachers and students). It should consider physical, emotional and
sexual violence.
• Describe the problems and types of violence that need to be addressed (based on available
data; see Section 2).
• Outline, in clear and measurable targets, what should be achieved.
• Set out clear rules for all members of the school community and make sure the rules are
easily accessible.
• Highlight that all members of the school community should be treated fairly and equally
if they break the rules.
• Set out the consequences if the rules are broken.
• Share ways to report an incident and describe referral pathways, in case other institutions
are involved in the response.
It is important to share the policy widely and display it publicly to make sure the entire school
community is aware of it. For example, you could:
• Post the policy where it can easily be seen.
• Discuss the policy as part of school lessons, for example at the beginning of each
school year.
• Make parents aware of the policy at school events where they are usually present.
• Hold regular reminder events.
Because of the links between alcohol and drugs and violent behaviour, it is also worth thinking
about combined policies on having, using and dealing substances within school grounds.
Section 1: Getting started: Develop leadership, school policies and coordination methods 15
15
Other helpful tips:
Timeline: a timetable will help manage all the various steps needed to achieve a
particular outcome.
Roles and responsibilities, and the resources and skills needed: You should clearly state who
is responsible for delivering each activity and consider whether they have the skills to do so.
It is important to agree who will contribute what and by when.
16
16 Section 1: Getting started: Develop leadership, school policies and coordination methods
Key actions: Getting started: Develop leadership, school policies and
coordination methods
Section 1: Getting started: Develop leadership, school policies and coordination methods 17
17
ECTION 2
ollect data on violence
nd monitor changes
Section 2: Collect data
on violence and monitor
ver time
The WHO Global School-based Student Health Survey, the Violence Against
Children Surveys and the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development) Programme for International Student Assessment education surveys
are all regularly carried out in many parts of the world.
You can use the data you collect to understand how levels of violence change over time, and to
identify emerging forms of violence before they become a problem. It also helps to understand
what types of violence are the most common in certain schools and allocate resources where
they are needed. Data can help to guide violence prevention activities (Section 3) and help
to find out whether the activities are effective or not (Section 9).
18
18 Section 2: Collect data on violence and monitor changes over time
There are seven important steps for data collection:
3. Make sure that data and the way you collect it is kept confidential
It is important to consider the effect that collecting data on violence can have on students,
and you must make sure that the collection process is confidential. The identities of victims,
perpetrators and whistleblowers must be kept anonymous. This includes keeping all paper-
based reporting forms in a locked cabinet in an undisclosed location and making sure
that electronic systems are password-protected. You can see further ethical and safety
considerations about collecting data in Box 2.2.
20
20 Section 2: Collect data on violence and monitor changes over time
How regularly should the data be analyzed?
You can analyze data over various time frames. For example, weekly, monthly,
each term or yearly. This will depend on how often you collect data, the resources
available and how quickly you need the information to help guide any action you
take. For example, you could analyze routinely collected data every month and less
frequently collected data every year. You will need to consider holiday periods. For
instance, the number of days students attend school (and experience violence in
school and other settings) may differ by term or month.
5. Include questions that measure violence in existing school surveys and EMIS
EMIS1 is a data-collection and management system for the education sector that collects and
processes basic information from schools annually through school principals and is used to
monitor progress and guide decision-making. Including data on violence in EMIS or similar
systems can be a useful way of making sure that data collection is sustainable, meaning that it
can be ensured that the data is collected over a long period of time (UNESCO and UN Women,
2016) and will allow data from individual schools to feed into wider regional or national data
collection systems.
6. Carry out surveys to assess the extent of violence, where and when violence
takes place, the characteristics of those involved and perceptions of violence
Anonymous data from surveys is often the best indication of how much violence is happening.
This is because many students do not report violent incidents to teachers or other school
staff but may share their experiences in an anonymous survey. There are a number of reliable
survey tools that contain items that you could use, such as the Global Schools Based Student
Health Survey, the ISPCAN Child Abuse Screening Tools (ICAST) and the Juvenile Victimization
Questionnaire (WHO, 2016b). The same tools should be used across schools so that data is
consistent, and you must follow ethical guidelines (Box 2.2).
These tools gather information on:
• Student demographics and characteristics: such as age and gender;
• The type of violence experienced: for example, bullying, sexual assault, physical violence;
• The location of violence: for example, within school, at home, within the wider community;
• The perpetrator: for example, peer, teacher, parent;
• Perceptions of violence in school, home and within the community settings.
1
EMIS http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0013/001323/132306e.pdf
While sharing data can benefit schools, it can also become sensitive if it is used to make
comparisons across schools. You should weigh the benefits of sharing data against the possible
negative effects and always consider the best interests of the children at school.
Confidentiality, anonymity and a non-judgmental attitude are particularly important for cases
of violence that carry a significant stigma in many settings, for example sexual violence or
violence based on sexual orientation.
Many countries have guidelines on carrying out research with children. There are also
international standards and commitments (CIOMS and WHO2, UNICEF3). The UNICEF Office
of Research – Innocenti has a webpage with various resources on ethical research involving
children: https://www.unicef-irc.org/research/ethical-research-and-children/
2
CIOMS and WHO. International ethical guidelines for health-related research involving humans.
3
UNICEF, Centre for Children and Young People, Southern Cross University, Childwatch International
Research Network, University of Otago. International charter for ethical research involving children
22
22 Section 2: Collect data on violence and monitor changes over time
7. Use data to guide violence prevention activities
It is important to use evidence and data to guide your violence prevention activities. It is
helpful to find a way of regularly discussing trends and patterns of violence. For example the
coordination committee could present the data once a year to the school board, teachers and
the local government, and based on their findings, decisions can be made to strengthen certain
measures or take further actions to improve specific areas of concern.
Several tools have been developed to help turn data into action. One example is the forthcoming
Data to Action Tool (United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), which outlines
how to help move from data collected through the Violence against Children Surveys (VACS)
to developing and putting in place action plans to prevent and respond to violence against
children. These tools can help stakeholders to:
• Interpret and apply key findings from the data.
• Identify priorities for action.
• Define strategies to address violence through activities backed by data and evidence (see
also Section 3).
Additional resources
Council of Europe. Violence reduction Includes a chapter on developing school
in schools: how to make a difference. A audits to measure a) levels of violence and b)
handbook. how well schools are organized to respond to
violence.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Includes a chapter on monitoring and
Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and UN evaluation that describes data collection,
Women. Global guidance on addressing system-wide monitoring and further research
school-related gender-based violence. related to gender-based violence.
World Health Organization. Injury Provides information about developing,
Surveillance Guidelines interpreting and using surveillance
(monitoring) systems to plan action.
A central part of school-based violence prevention involves working directly with children to
look at some of the root causes of violent behaviour. It is practical, and beneficial in the long
term, to include skills to recognize violence, to stay safe, to resolve conflicts in non-violent
ways, to manage emotions, to access help and support and to support someone else who may
be experiencing violence in the curriculum. These are more effective than one-off measures.
The following three key strategies can be applied in schools and form part of the INSPIRE
package that outlines seven strategies for ending violence against children (INSPIRE; WHO,
2016a), and which is rolled out globally:
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24 Section 3: Prevent violence through curriculum-based activities
Teach children about safe behaviour
This includes the ability to recognize situations in which abuse or violence can happen
and understand how to avoid potentially risky situations and where to find help.
This knowledge can make children less vulnerable to abuse and reduce the risk of
violence happening again (through telling a trusted adult, for example) (WHO, 2016a).
You can also address risk factors for violence, such as alcohol and drug use, through
making children aware of these substances, including the consequences of using
them and recognizing high-risk situations (Onrust et al, 2016; Faggiano et al, 2014).
Challenge social and cultural norms and promote equal relationships
Social and cultural behaviour and stereotypes around, for example gender, sexual
orientation, religion, ethnicity and disability, increase the risk of bullying and
violence. Challenging harmful norms and strengthening those that promote non-
violent, positive and equal relationships can reduce any justification for violent
behaviour (WHO, 2016a). Promoting political, religious and ethnic tolerance is also
likely to be important in preventing hate crimes as well as violent extremism and
radicalization (Bellis et al, 2017). Challenging perceived social norms around young
people’s use of substances is also an important part of preventing substance abuse
(Onrust et al, 2016; Faggiano et al, 2014) that helps address risk factors for violence.
These strategies can be used alone or as a combination and can be employed throughout
children’s school lives (Table 3.1). The earlier you begin, the more potential there is to have
a positive effect on children’s attitudes and behaviour. Preschool is therefore an ideal place
to begin working with children, before their behaviour and ways of thinking become deeply
engrained. As children progress through education, they may begin to be exposed to more
types of violence (for example, bullying, cyberbullying, gang violence and dating violence). These
need more tailored forms of violence prevention, but the underlying strategies are still the same.
Table 3.1: Key topics for a violence prevention curriculum for each age group
Incorporating topics that help to address violence into the curriculum will have advantages
over the long term (Box 3.1). However, whether you are able to do this may depend on how far
you can adapt or develop your curriculum, particularly if it is set at a national or regional level.
When planning your curriculum, it will help to (based on UNESCO and UN Women 2016):
• Make sure the materials you use are appropriate to the age of the children;
• Use active participation to help children absorb information;
• Use capable and motivated educators and provide them with good-quality training
on the content of messages and how to deliver them (training costs can be shared with
other schools);
• Review the curriculum and get feedback from students and staff;
• Make sure that materials are culturally relevant. This includes revising language, concepts
and delivery methods and testing it before using regularly (see Box 3.1 for an example).
The following steps will help you to put violence prevention activities in place:
Step 1: Based on the data that was found or collected on violence in your school or setting
(Section 2), decide on violence prevention activities that are most appropriate to address the
types of violence you encounter most frequently and that are feasible to implement in your
setting. Adapt the strategy to your context. You should consider whether it will be possible to
sustain these activities in the long term. Test these activities on a small scale e.g. in one grade
or as extracurricular activities.
Step 2: Once the prevention strategy has been adapted and tested, review the existing
curriculum and existing routines and activities and decide jointly with the coordinating team
where to introduce each prevention strategy.
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26 Section 3: Prevent violence through curriculum-based activities
Developing life and social skills
This approach aims to build students’ resilience through improving their ability to create
positive relationships and solve everyday problems in constructive ways. Life skills training can
help reduce child behavioural problems, aggression and violence, increase social competence
and the ability to manage emotions, and improve academic performance.
Curricula can:
• Be implemented from preschool through to secondary school (Table 3.2).
• Be combined with parent training (Section 7) and teacher training (Section 4).
• Be delivered by trained teachers using a variety of methods such as role play, discussion,
group activities and written exercises.
Table 3.2: Life and social skill approaches across educational stages
Incredible Years (Table 3.2) was adapted for use in Jamaica among teachers
with limited training and resources. Following a small-scale trial, the curriculum
was altered so that Incredible Years could be incorporated into existing teaching
activities rather than provided separately. Also, the teacher-training elements made
greater use of role plays and small group work (preferred learning styles), included
Jamaican-based short films and step-by-step guidance on how to teach skills to
children, and developed handouts using simplified language and strategy examples.
The curriculum was tested in 24 preschools. Fewer child conduct problems and
behavioural difficulties were reported, both in school and at home. The research led
to the development of the Irie Classroom Toolbox, a low-cost training package for
schools aimed at improving how children’s behaviour is managed (Section 4).
Baker Henningham et al, 2009, 2012, 2016, 2018
Preventing bullying
Bullying prevention develops children’s Bullying prevention curricula include:
social and emotional skills, challenges • developing social and emotional skills
accepted behaviour around bullying and
• challenging attitudes towards bullying
the behaviour of bystanders, and improves
knowledge of bullying and how children can • increasing knowledge of bullying
protect themselves. • encouraging bystanders to intervene
Bullying prevention: Source: Lee et al, 2015
4
Olweus bullying prevention program. https://olweus.sites.clemson.edu/
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28 Section 3: Prevent violence through curriculum-based activities
Box 3.2: KiVa bullying prevention; Europe and Chile
Bullying often increases during periods of changing from one school to another. This
is a time when new social relationships need to be made; children can use bullying
to gain dominance over their peers, while supportive friendships that could protect
against bullying are often lacking (Pellegrini and Long, 2002). You can help by:
(before a move) providing opportunities for students to meet new school staff and
students and visit school buildings; and (after a move) creating social opportunities
for new starters to form friendships, using peer mentors and putting in place
activities that can help prevent bullying.
Schools can also be ideal places to begin the prevention of radicalization and violent extremism,
which are of growing concern in many countries (Box 3.6).
30
30 Section 3: Prevent violence through curriculum-based activities
Box 3.5: Gangs Resistance Education And Training (G.R.E.A.T.); USA and Central
America
32
32 Section 3: Prevent violence through curriculum-based activities
• They can be included in existing curricula on sex education or personal and social education.
• They can be delivered by trained teachers over a series of lessons using methods such as
group discussions, role play, stories and written exercises.
Additional resources
World Health Organization. Preventing youth violence: Presents strategies to prevent
an overview of the evidence. youth violence, including those
carried out within schools.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Highlights curriculum approaches
Organisation (UNESCO) and UN Women. Global to preventing gender-based
guidance on addressing school-related gender-based violence within school settings
violence. and possible entry points.
Fancy K and McAslan Fraser E. Guidance note on Provides guidance on designing
addressing violence against women and girls in education programmes to
education programming. address violence against women
and girls.
Council of Europe. Violence reduction in schools: how to Includes a chapter on using the
make a difference. A handbook. school curriculum to support
violence reduction.
34
34 Section 3: Prevent violence through curriculum-based activities
Section 4: Work with
teachers on values and
beliefs and train them in
positive discipline and
SECTION 4
Work with teachers on values and
beliefs and train them in positive
discipline and classroom management
classroom management
1. Address harmful beliefs and the social, cultural and gender norms of
teachers
Teaching practices can be heavily influenced by social, cultural and gender norms as well as
teachers’ experiences and beliefs. For instance, using corporal and emotional punishment can
be driven by cultural and personal beliefs, and beliefs within society, that it is a normal and
effective method of disciplining children (Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary
Section 4: Work with teachers on values and beliefs and train them in positive discipline and classroom management 35
35
General on Violence, 2012). Unequal power relations between males and females in society,
as well as gender roles and stereotypes, can make it more socially acceptable for teachers
to give girls less or lower-quality attention than boys, punish girls and boys in different ways
(for example, corporal punishment for boys, emotional or verbal punishment for girls) or
overlook disrespectful behaviour by boys towards girls (Office of the Special Representative
of the Secretary General on Violence, 2012). Similarly, social and cultural stereotypes based
on ethnicity, disability or sexual orientation can influence teaching practices, making certain
groups of students more vulnerable to violence, bullying and unequal treatment by other
children and school staff (UNESCO, 2012; Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary
General on Violence, 2012; Pinheiro, 2006).
It is important to give teachers opportunities to improve awareness of social, cultural and
gender norms, the influence these can have on their teaching methods, and how they can
move towards equality in teaching. Sessions should focus on the following (based on UNESCO
and UN Women, 2016; Fancy and McAslan Fraser, 2014):
• Awareness of social, cultural and gender norms and their influence on teaching practices,
violent behaviour and school attendance;
• The role that teaching practices and materials can have on reinforcing social, cultural and
gender norms;
• How to recognize violence based on social, cultural and gender norms and to challenge
and deal with this behaviour among students. Teachers will need a good understanding
of school policies on violent behaviour (Section 1). They should be supported by school
management in the enforcement of these policies. They should be trained in how to respond
to violence when it happens (Section 5).
36
36 Section 4: Work with teachers on values and beliefs and train them in positive discipline and classroom management
Training around discipline could also include awareness of how traumatic experiences and
neglectful or abusive home lives can affect children’s behaviour and learning. Trauma-informed
approaches recognize this link and the important role that teachers have in building safe,
trusting relationships with children outside of the home. These approaches support troubled
children with their wider issues rather than penalize them for bad behaviour, and could help
to improve their mental health and longer-term behaviour.
The Good School Toolkit is a resource created by Raising Voices that aims to create
positive learning environments for children that are safe and free from violence. The
approach provides a series of six steps for creating ‘good schools’. This includes
learning materials for teachers to develop skills to interact positively with students
and manage challenging behaviour in non-violent ways. The Good School Toolkit
challenges teaching methods based on memorizing information and motivating
students through fear, focusing instead on building children’s confidence and life
skills. In Uganda, using the programme among children aged 11 to 14 reduced
violence by school staff against children staff compared with control schools.
Devries et al, 2015.
Section 4: Work with teachers on values and beliefs and train them in positive discipline and classroom management 37
37
Box 4.2: Examples of classroom management and positive discipline programmes
The Good Behaviour Game Kellam et al, 2008; Schneider et al, 2016
The Good Behaviour Game encourages children to obey classroom rules and to
share and cooperate. Children are divided into teams and play a game in which
they must follow four rules; work quietly, be polite to others, don’t leave their seats
without permission, and follow directions. Teams are rewarded if they stick to the
rules and cooperate with each other. In the USA, the game has continued to reduce
both aggressive and antisocial behaviour 14 years later.
As a next step, consider including positive discipline and classroom management in pre-service
training. When pre-service training is organized centrally, consider advocating with institutions
that are in charge of pre-service training. This will make sure that all teachers become skilled
in creating safe learning environments from the beginning of their careers.
Work with teachers on values and beliefs and train them in positive discipline
and classroom management
38
38 Section 4: Work with teachers on values and beliefs and train them in positive discipline and classroom management
Additional Resources
Naker and Sekitoleko (2009). Positive A handbook on how to use positive
discipline. Creating a good school without discipline within the classroom.
corporal punishment. Kampala, Uganda:
Raising Voices, 2009.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and A guide for teachers offering 10 actions to
Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Stopping prevent and stop violence in schools.
violence in school: a guide for teachers. Paris:
UNESCO, 2009.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and A toolkit for teachers, school administrators
Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Positive and education officials to effectively manage
discipline in the inclusive, learning friendly students in the classroom using positive
classroom. A guide for teachers and teacher discipline approaches.
educators. Paris: UNESCO, 2015.
Education International. Building a gender A toolkit for educators for helping to create
friendly school environment: a toolkit for a healthy, safe classroom environment.
educators and their unions. Educational Focuses on challenging negative gender
International, 2007. stereotyping and gender inequalities.
Section 4: Work with teachers on values and beliefs and train them in positive discipline and classroom management 39
39
SECTION 5
Respond to violence
when it happens
Section 5: Respond to
violence when it happens
40
40 Section 5: Respond to violence when it happens
• Fear of going to school or joining school events;
• Being anxious or nervous;
• Having few friends in school or outside of school;
• Losing friends suddenly or avoiding social situations;
• Clothing, electronics or other personal belongings being lost or destroyed;
• Often asking for money;
• Low academic performance;
• Absenteeism;
• Trying to stay near adults;
• Not sleeping well and may be having nightmares;
• Psychosomatic complaints, for example, headaches, stomach aches or other
physical complaints;
• Regularly distressed after spending time online or on their phone (without a reasonable
explanation); and
• Being aggressive, having angry outbursts, or being very vigilant.
3. Helping victims
For children who have been victims of violence, you should first provide support that is gender-
sensitive and child-centred. You should do the following:
• Listen respectfully and with empathy;
• Ask about the student’s worries or concerns and needs, and answer all their questions;
• Recognize their feelings and respond without judging them;
4. Referral
Some children that have been exposed to violence might be severely distressed and might
need extra support. Pay particular attention to:
• Children who may hurt themselves or others; and
• Children who are so upset, fearful or emotionally charged that they cannot care for
themselves or take part in daily school life.
When setting up a school’s response to violence (see also Section 1 on reporting options for
children), it is important that you know the child protection, medical, psychosocial or mental-
health services, legal services or family-welfare services that exist in the community. It can
be helpful to carry out a mapping exercise about available services and what they offer. With
that information, the school can easily establish a clear referral process that outlines what
type of cases need to be referred, who and where to refer them to, and any follow-up action
you will take.
Tips to consider:
• Make contacting other services on behalf of the child a priority.
• Asking students to repeatedly describe the incident should be avoided.
• The student needs to give their informed consent before any of their personal information
is shared with other services. In some countries, mandatory reporting may give teachers
the discretion to report an incident to specialized services but even in these circumstances,
teachers need to keep the student informed of the process, the next steps and why
information needs to be shared with others.
• Offer students the choice to be accompanied by a trusted person.
It is important that referral works in two ways. Referrals often tend to be made to more
specialized services, but emphasis should also be given on supporting a smooth transition
from more specialized support back into the community or school.
42
42 Section 5: Respond to violence when it happens
preventing further violence. If a positive discipline approach is all that is needed, the response
should be:
• Fast;
• Proportional to the offence;
• Focused on correcting the behaviour, not humiliating the student; and
• Aimed at rehabilitation (learning from mistakes) not punishment.
In the case of severe physical or sexual violence, the involvement of legal authorities and other
specialized services might be appropriate. In other severe cases, where a child is excluded from
school, appropriate support must be offered to reduce their risk of being drawn into crime or
gang membership outside of school.
Trauma-informed approaches in schools recognize that a child’s home life and life experiences
often affect their behaviour and indicate the root causes as to why they are aggressive or
violent. Children that demonstrate violent behaviour have often been victims of violence
themselves in the past. Working with children to understand why they have behaved in a
certain way, and providing support or referral where needed, is important. This approach could
help to improve the child’s future behaviour, mental health and learning.
Perpetrators of violence can also be teachers and other staff, even in places where violence
by teachers is illegal. To deal with violence by staff effectively, it is important that the school
follows clear rules and regulations outlined in its regulatory framework (see Section 1), and
that it has clear rules on how to deal with allegations of violence to teachers. To avoid a culture
of silence, consequences for violence must be clear and enforced equally for everyone.
44
44 Section 5: Respond to violence when it happens
Respond to violence when it happens
and grounds
It is important to consider the school buildings and surrounding areas when taking action to
prevent violence. Disorder (litter, graffiti, disrepair; Wilcox et al, 2006; Lindstrom et al, 2009;
Uline et al, 2008), shared unsupervised spaces (Astor et al, 1999; USAID and PEPFAR, 2014;
Rapp-Paglicci et al, 2004) or isolated and poorly lit areas (UNESCO and UN Women, 2016;
USAID and PEPFAR, 2014) can increase the risk of violent incidents and affect academic
performance.
There are three ways in which to improve safety of school buildings and grounds:
46
46 Section 6: Review and adapt school buildings and grounds
Box 6.1: Identifying hotspot areas in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
A mapping exercise was used with girls and boys in 54 schools in the DRC as part
of a project to increase girls’ education (EAGLE: Empowering Adolescent Girls to
Lead Through Education). In groups, students drew school maps showing shared
spaces and routes to school. They highlighted areas where they felt safe (using
green dots) and unsafe (using red dots) and discussed why. The most common
areas that students felt unsafe were certain streets and areas to and from school,
the classroom, playground and school toilets.
Source: USAID and PEPFAR, 2014
2. Make sure there are clean, separate toilets for boys and girls
Communal toilets (shared by boys and girls) can increase opportunities for violence against
girls. In the example provided in Box 6.1, adolescent girls in the Democratic Republic of Congo
reported shared toilets as being common locations for sexual and other types of violence by
boys, with many girls avoiding using the toilets during school hours. Shared toilets should
therefore be replaced with separate, clean facilities in safe locations (UNESCO and UN Women,
2016). This may also encourage female students to attend school during menstruation.
5
SAfETy (School Assessment for Environmental Typology) is a tool developed in the USA that describes
the school environment across three areas: school ownership, disorder and surveillance. Based on
principles of Crime prevention through Environmental Design (CPTED), it measures eight features of
the physical and social environment linked to behavioural and academic outcomes (Bradshaw et al,
2015). Items will need adapting for use in different contexts.
6
CCTV and other visible security measures (metal detectors; security officers) can be useful ways of
increasing surveillance. However, care should be taken, as these measures could have a negative impact
on perceived safety (Hankin et al, 2011), perceived violence (Mayer and Leone, 1999) and academic
performance (Tanner-Smith and Fisher, 2016).
Students, staff, parents (Section 7) and the community (Section 8) can all be involved in
school premise improvements. For instance, students could develop artwork for school walls,
staff could supervise hotspots, and parents and the community could help to maintain school
buildings and grounds, set up ‘walking school buses’, or patrol school routes.
Feature Examples
1. School disorder • Alcohol bottles or drug paraphernalia in school buildings and
grounds
• Broken lights in school entrances and corridors
• Gang-related activities in the school surroundings
2. Litter • Litter in school buildings and grounds
3. Graffiti and vandalism • Graffiti and signs of vandalism in school buildings and
grounds
4. School appearance • Buildings that need maintenance
• School grounds that need maintenance and landscaping
5. Lighting • Poorly lit shared areas (for example, canteen, corridors,
stairways)
6. Surveillance • Few surveillance opportunities in school grounds and
entrance, for example, clear lines of visibility, security
cameras or school police officers.
7. School ownership • Lack of signs that areas belong to school grounds, for
example school signs
• Lack of identification of school buildings, for example
through murals
8. Positive behaviour • Few visible signs highlighting expectations about behaviour
expectations in school buildings and grounds
48
48 Section 6: Review and adapt school buildings and grounds
Reviewing and adapting the physical environment
Additional resources
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Includes guidance on creating safe and
Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and UN welcoming spaces within schools.
Women. Global guidance on addressing
school-related gender-based violence.
UNICEF. Manual. Child Friendly Schools. A practical guide that introduces child friendly
schools and includes guidance on creating
safe and healthy environments.
Council of Europe. Violence reduction Includes a chapter on making the school
in schools: how to make a difference. A environment safe, which explores ways to
handbook. promote a non-violent climate.
Parents are an important influence on children’s values, attitudes and behaviour. Building
positive and meaningful relationships between schools and parents can help your efforts to
prevent violence and improve academic progress. Violence prevention programmes in schools
might not be effective if children are exposed to violence in their homes. Children may also
replicate behaviours learnt at home when they are in school. Therefore, schools have a role
to play in identifying and addressing violence in the homes of students and other potential
risks to children’s wellbeing.
Initiatives at school level to get parents more involved include the following:
7
http://www.kivaprogram.net/
50
50 Section 7: Involve parents in violence prevention activities
2. Spread messages on how parents can support their child’s learning
A parent’s interest in their child’s school life can help improve the child’s behaviour and
academic achievement (WHO, 2015). Talking to parents about school life can get them more
interested and can increase opportunities for parents and children to discuss and practise the
skills and messages learned at school. Good two-way communication is key (UNICEF, 2009).
Schools should offer opportunities for parents to find out what their children are learning and
to discuss any concerns they might have. The coordinating team can be an entry point in
becoming a platform for discussions and information sharing.
Other examples to inform parents can be by:
• Inviting parents to the school to see what the children are learning such as parent days or
parent-teacher meetings;
• Organizing events that reflect children’s learning (Box 7.1);
• Sending newsletters or other regular forms of communication home with children;
• Setting homework that parents can get involved in (UNICEF, 2009; Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, 2012).
Source: UNICEF, 2009; Dawson-McClure et al, 2015; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2012
See also Uganda’s Good School Toolkit for a model case study. (Box 4.1)
52
52 Section 7: Involve parents in violence prevention activities
Involving parents in violence prevention activities
Additional resources
United States Centers for Disease Control Provides guidance on strategies that schools
and Prevention. Parent Engagement: can use to increase parent engagement in
Strategies for Involving Parents in School school health promotion activities
Health
UNICEF. Manual. Child Friendly Schools A practical guide that introduces child friendly
schools and includes guidance on involving
families and caregivers in children’s education.
Welsh Government. FaCE the challenge A toolkit on family and community engagement
together: family and community for schools that includes welcoming families to
engagement toolkit for schools in Wales engage with the school and helping families to
actively support their child’s learning.
Violence prevention activities are likely to have more of an effect if the community is supportive.
Partnerships with community groups such as health services, police, faith organizations, out-
of-school services, youth groups, universities, nongovernmental organizations and local
businesses can help deliver messages and bring expertise and resources to prevention
activities. Ways to involve the community include the following (see box 8.2 for guidance on
developing community partnerships):
54
54 Section 8: Involve the community in violence prevention activities
2. Consider existing multisectoral coordinating bodies such as
community violence prevention committees and:
• Ask for recommendations from the head teacher, board of governors and
community leaders.
• Announce the opportunity at school and community meetings, and post signs in
the community.
• Visit recommended and interested community members. Explain what the school
will be doing and emphasize that, to succeed, the support of the community is
needed.
• Do not force people’s interest. Watch for those who are naturally excited about
the ideas and invite them to a special meeting at school. Make sure anyone
invited is nonviolent, respectful, invested in the school, and able to volunteer.
• At the meeting, review the importance of violence prevention, invite student
and teacher committee members to speak, and outline the benefits and
responsibilities of getting involved.
• If more than 10 people (including parents) show interest, choose or elect the
committee members. More than 10 members may become difficult to manage.
4. Open the school as a place where community activities can take place
Schools can link with the community by offering school premises for community activities
and events outside of school hours. This could include adult education, sports and recreation
sessions or community meetings, and may help give the wider community a more positive
view of the school.
56
56 Section 8: Involve the community in violence prevention activities
Box 8.2 Guidance on developing community partnerships
Adapted from: Welsh Government (2016). FaCE the challenge together: family and community engagement toolkit for
schools in Wales
Additional resources
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Includes guidance on creating partnerships
Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and UN with other sectors and members of the
Women. Global guidance on addressing community
school-related gender-based violence.
Welsh Government. FaCE the challenge A toolkit on family and community
together: family and community engagement engagement for schools that includes
toolkit for schools in Wales developing community partnerships and
multi-agency working.
your approach
Evaluating your activities – that is, assessing whether they work in reducing violence – is an
important part of violence prevention. It can help to see if an activity is an effective use of
resources and whether it is worth continuing or running on a larger scale. It can help identify
which parts of an activity work well, and which do not, and this in turn will help to improve
them for future use. Evaluation can also help other schools and even other countries to learn
from the experience. It is important to make a plan for the evaluation right at the beginning of
an activity, to make sure there is baseline data beforehand.
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58 Section 9: Evaluate violence prevention activities and use the evidence to strengthen your approach
existing evaluation processes or regular school surveys, or to do a small survey before and
after the activity.
Outcome indicators are measures that can be collected over time that can help answer whether
violence prevention activities have been successful or not. Examples include: the percentage
of students who report being bullied in the past month, the number of fights reported to the
school in the past three months, or the percentage of students who have used support services
for a violence-related incident in the last year (see Section 2). Outcome indicators are not:
whether students or teachers are satisfied with the activity, how many students have been
reached, or how many activities/trainings have been conducted.
It is helpful to have a mix of indicators that measure changes in the outcomes the school
wants to achieve (for example, how much physical fighting there is in school) and those
indicators that are more sensitive to change, for example a change in attitude of students
towards physical fighting.
The INSPIRE Indicator Guidance and Results Framework includes a core list of indicators to
measure violence against children. The framework has been developed by 10 international
agencies to help governments and nongovernmental organizations monitor progress and
track changes over time as they put in place strategies to prevent and respond to violence
against children (UNICEF, 2018). It would be helpful to align these with existing national results
frameworks or indicators at national level so that the Ministry of Education can compare the
effects of violence prevention activities in schools across the country.
Monitoring systems that collect data at regular intervals can be a useful source of information
for outcome indicators (see Section 2). Existing questionnaires can also be a useful resource
and allows data to be compared across settings. Examples include the Global Schools-based
Student Health Survey, the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Study (see also Section
2), the Lifetime Victimization Screening Questionnaire, and the International Society for the
Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect (ISPCAN) Child Abuse Screening Tools (ICAST).
Once you have identified outcome indicators you can compare them before and after an
activity. This can identify how levels of violence and other outcomes change following an
activity and whether an activity looks promising. Because outcomes can change over time,
even without any activity or intervention, it would be best to compare these measures before
and after the activity with the same measures taken from a second group of participants that
did not participate in the violence prevention intervention.
It is important to make sure that findings are practical and relevant for other practitioners
and for key stakeholders from the school community. Therefore, all people who might have
an interest in the evaluation results or who should change their practice as a result of the
evaluation should be involved from the beginning.
Section 9: Evaluate violence prevention activities and use the evidence to strengthen your approach 59
59
It is strongly suggested that the evaluation becomes embedded in the schools plan and
therefore that the exercise is managed by evaluators or oversight committees from national
authorities rather than coordinated at school-level.
Key steps in planning evaluations include (adapted from DFID, 2012; UNESCO and UN Women,
2016; WHO, 2015, www.uneval.org):
a. Involve all potential stakeholders from the beginning to encourage responsibility: It
is important to involve all stakeholders who are expected to change the way they work or who
are involved in policies on schools-based violence prevention from the beginning, so that they
can help plan the evaluation and understand the method and outcomes. This may mean they
are more likely to act on the outcomes.
b. Identify the purpose of the evaluation and define evaluation questions: For example,
this could be to see whether an activity has been successful in reducing violence, improving
school attendance, improving learning outcomes, or improving attitudes and social norms.
For violence prevention, some example questions might be: Did the activity reduce levels of
bullying? Did it reduce the number of physical fights between students? Did it increase the
use of student support services?
c. Decide on a set of outcome indicators related to evaluation questions (see point 1)
d. Decide the timeframe for the evaluation: Outcomes collected over the short term (for
example, immediately following the activity or one month after) can quickly give you an idea
of whether the activities affect levels of violence. Longer-term outcomes (six months or a
year or more later) can determine whether effects last over time and whether activities need
a booster in the future. Many evaluations include both short- and longer-term outcomes to
monitor effects over time.
e. Decide on the evaluation design: The most basic design involves comparing outcome
indicators before and after an activity (point 1). Stronger designs involve using a comparison
group such as classrooms or schools that do not do the activity (known as a control group).
This group is important, since it can help determine whether any changes in violence and
other outcomes are due to the intervention or to other factors that apply at the same time
(for instance, awareness campaigns or prevention activities running in the wider community).
When putting a programme in place for the first time, it might be useful to test it on a small
scale with a basic design, and later move to a full-fledged outcome evaluation, such as a
randomized controlled trial.
f. Decide on the methods of evaluation: Outcome evaluations use quantitative approaches.
These are based on data (for example, counts, percentages) from surveys, data that is routinely
collected, and monitoring systems (see Section 2). However, you can also use qualitative
approaches in your evaluation. These are based on people’s accounts of experiences, and
perceptions and attitudes gathered from interviews, focus groups and observations (see
Section 2). Qualitative data can help understand what people think about an activity and
how they perceive violence and other outcomes to have changed and why. They can often
be useful in understanding how an activity works in practice and how it can be improved.
g. Carry out evaluation and strengthen prevention strategies based on findings: It
is important that schools use learning and recommendations from an evaluation to inform
prevention activities wherever possible and strengthen them for future or wider use. Share
success stories with the whole school to celebrate efforts to prevent violence and motivate
teachers, staff and others to continue to use the activities.
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60 Section 9: Evaluate violence prevention activities and use the evidence to strengthen your approach
3. Include outcome indicators in broader monitoring and evaluation
systems that collect data on violence and how schools respond to
violence
You should feed outcome indicators from evaluation into monitoring systems (Section 2) that
collect data on violence and the response to violence in schools. It may help to incorporate
outcomes within education management systems such as EMIS (Section 2), which can be
used to monitor violence at individual school, regional and national levels.
Evaluate violence prevention activities and use the evidence to strengthen your
approaches
Additional resources
Educational Videos on Programme Three animated videos that describe:
Evaluation 1. Why evaluation? Visual introduction to the
UBS Optimus Foundation and Crimes importance of evaluation
against Children Research Center (CCRC), 2. Programme theory: Describes how a strong
University of New Hampshire programme theory can help you plan for
evaluation
3. Measuring outcomes: Explains what it
means to define measurable outcomes and
how to avoid common pitfalls
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Includes guidance on monitoring school-
Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and UN related gender based violence and evaluating
Women. Global guidance on addressing programmes that address this.
school-related gender-based violence.
DFID. Guidance on monitoring and Provides guidance on developing monitoring
evaluation for programming on violence systems and evaluation plans for programmes
against women and girls (2012). addressing violence against women and girls
Section 9: Evaluate violence prevention activities and use the evidence to strengthen your approach 61
61
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