Could it
Happen Here?
By Susan
Fitzell
"It is possible to eliminate war and destruction, if we start with
our youth, educating them to understand the conditioning that
teaches them to hate those different from themselves. If we teach
our children to understand the barriers to peace and the skills to
resolve conflict, we have invested in our future. We've invested in
a peaceful world. We need to start somewhere. We can begin in our
homes and our schools. Plant the seed, nurture it and watch it
grow."
I wrote these words in 1995 as I set out on a mission to bring
understanding of the root of conflict and propose solutions beyond
Band-Aid fixes to our schools. Now, as our world has entered a new
millennium, I read headlines reporting one more incident of tragic
school violence. What is it going to take for us to take this issue
seriously? How many more children will die? How many more families
will be torn apart before we, as a society, move beyond the
discomfort of the problem into dealing with it?
Many people say the problem is being addressed. It is being
addressed in bits and pieces and 45-minute lessons here and there
once a week for X weeks. It is being addressed with metal detectors
and police officers in our schools. It is being addressed by
training the cream of the crop in our schools to be peer mediators,
ignoring opportunities to include all the other children who need
the skills. It is being addressed in one or two hour staff
development workshops for teachers once a year. It is being
addressed by expanding prisons, trying children as adults, creating
tougher laws. We have school funding for improvements in technology,
like new computers, test answer key scanners, and sports, while
funding for conflict education training is minimal or non-existent.
Schools blame parents for the problems, while parents blame the
schools. We are always looking for something or someone to blame;
the media, the break-up of the family, drugs, not enough income, too
much money, etc. The truth is that there is no one thing to blame.
We have a societal problem. As long as we blame any one 'thing' we
will not take responsibility for 'our' role in the problem. If we
don't take responsibility for our role as an important and
contributing member of the affected society, we will not achieve the
peaceful and safe world we desire for our youth and ourselves.
Look in the mirror. Stop blaming the state of our youth on the next
guy. Stop saying it can't happen to my kid, or in my town, or in my
state. Ask yourself what you can do. Don't even consider that you
can do nothing. That's not an acceptable response if you want the
violence to stop.
We need a holistic solution that begins with facilitating
educational experiences for the parents and guardians of our
children. We need to help parents and guardians feel safe enough to
support one another so they are not raising children in isolation.
While we are spending billions overpopulating our prisons, we are
seriously lacking in support and services for families in our
country.
We need to understand that children who feel hungry or unsafe cannot
achieve academic success in schools. School culture must include
acceptance and understanding of academic and cultural differences
along with zero tolerance, for physical and verbal bullying. Verbal
bullying is too often ignored or minimized, even though it is more
damaging to a greater number of children over time than physical
bullying is.
Academic success cannot happen for all children unless all school
staff are trained and willing to work towards a positive school
culture. So often, handfuls of staff are trained in necessary
skills, yet work in isolation of untrained staff. Children move from
class to class and get confusing and inconsistent messages of what
is expected of them.
Community members and businesses need to be included in the work of
raising and teaching healthy children. Until we realize the
importance of a whole society approach to change, and start to act
on that knowledge to bring together all factions of society in a
cooperative effort, we will continue to see an escalation of
violence in our youth.
It's not someone else's problem when we are faced with a child's
violent act. It is everyone's problem. The quality of all our lives
are affected daily by the headline news, the fear that is instilled
by that news, and the resulting behaviors we adapt because of our
need to survive. Just as water from the Nile eventually makes it
into American rivers, violence in Colorado affects lives in Maine,
and bullying in the neighborhood schools affects the future
well-being of the town. Whether we are affected directly or
indirectly, violence in our society touches each and every one of
our lives in some way. Until we understand and accept that fact and
take responsibility for our part in the solution, we will continue
to read the headline news open mouthed and aghast asking, "How could
it happen here?"
This article was originally published by
Inner Self.
Read other articles and learn more about
Susan Fitzell.
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