The School Violence Prevention Demonstration Program uses civic education to ameliorate or diminish tendencies toward violence among youth. The program operates from the theory that the development of responsible citizenship skills, both intellectual and participatory, can play a defining role in the way students act and think.
The first phase—the pilot year of the program—was conducted in seven school districts in the United States: Los Angeles (Calif.) Unified, Denver (Colo.) Public Schools, Jefferson County (Colo.) Public Schools, Wake County (N.C.) Public Schools, Philadelphia (Pa.) Public Schools, Community School District 30 (Queens, N.Y.), and District 23 (Brooklyn, N.Y.) Public Schools. The School Violence Prevention Demonstration Program curriculum consists of three sets of materials:
The curriculum emphasizes performance-based learning outcomes, with We the People… The Citizen and the Constitution culminating in a simulated congressional hearing and We the People… Project Citizen ultimately producing a problem-solving portfolio. These activities seek to promote social cooperation and positive group memberships, and they encourage positive attitudes toward social inclusion and tolerance for the ideas of others.
The program was evaluated using a quasi-experimental design with control groups, pretests, and posttests on knowledge and attitudes. Control groups receive their district’s regular social studies or history classes integrated with civics components. Quantitative and qualitative measures are both being used to determine the program’s effect during the course of the school year. Qualitative measures were assessed through focus groups, teacher questionnaires, and interviews of the students and parents. The program was implemented in grades 6 through 8 in large urban public school districts.
Research included gathering both quantitative and qualitative data. Quantitative data included statistical results gathered from pretest and posttest of knowledge of the Constitution and Bill of Rights and an attitudinal survey. Qualitative data included the results of focus groups in each of the seven sites, the teacher questionnaires, and classroom observations. Both the knowledge test and the attitudinal survey were administered to middle and upper elementary students during September and October 1999 and again in May and June 2000. The tests were given to 4,184 experimental group students who participated in the instructional strategy and 1,765 students in control groups who did not receive the instruction. Analysis of covariance was used as a statistical tool to control for preexisting differences between the control and experimental groups.
The attitudinal test measured four target areas of violence prevention. Those areas were “respect for authority and the law,” “tolerance for the ideas of others,” “inclusion of all people in the social and political process,” and “demonstrated sense of civic responsibility.”
The evaluation found that there were statistically significant gains in knowledge of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in all seven cities and statistically significant positive shifts in attitudes toward police and authority figures in six of the seven districts. In Queens and Denver, there were statistically significant gains (when compared with control group gains) in the experimental group students’ sense of civic responsibility and in their tolerance for the ideas of others and inclusion for all people in the political process. Queens also had a statistically significant positive shift in relation to authority and the law.
Qualitative information was gathered using focus groups, classroom observations, and teacher questionnaires. Qualitative data was quite positive. There was clear improvement in teacher morale and confidence in teaching about the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in all seven districts. Teachers appreciated and enjoyed receiving high-quality social studies textbooks in sufficient quantity, receiving professional development in an important area of their responsibility, meeting with teachers from other schools and other districts, and learning new teaching strategies. The teachers indicated that they gained appreciation for the power of performance-based assessment strategies. They also improved their knowledge of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. New teachers acquired skills, and experienced teachers indicated that they felt renewed by their participation in the program. Teachers also indicated that the students demonstrated a greater interest in civics, government, and social studies as a result of participating in the program.
Maguin, Eugene, and Rolf Loeber. 1996. “Academic Performance and Delinquency.” Crime and Justice 20:145–264.
Rosen, Louis. 2001. School Violence Prevention Demonstration Program: May 1999–June 2000. Calabasas, Calif.: Center for Civic Education.
Maria Gallo
Center for Civic Education
5145 Douglas Fir Road
Calabasas, CA 91302–1440
Phone: (818) 591-9321
Fax: (818) 591-9330
E-mail: gallo@civiced.org
Web site: http://www.civiced.org
Jerry Wartgow, Superintendent
Denver Public Schools
900 Grant Street, Room 702
Denver, CO 80203
Phone: (720) 423-3300
Fax: (720) 423-3318
Web site: http://www.dpsk12.org