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The Preventable Problem That Schools Ignore [theatlantic.com]

 

Nearly 1.5 million high-school students in the U.S. are physically abused by dating partners every year. More than one-third of 10th-graders (35 percent) have been physically or verbally abused by dating partners, while a similar percentage are perpetrators of such abuse. Youth from low-income backgrounds, those from marginalized racial and ethnic groups, and LGBTQ students are at the greatest risk of experiencing such harm.

The consequences are devastating. Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 2013 Youth Risk Behavior Survey found that adolescents who experienced teen dating violence were more likely than those who didn’t to report being bullied on school grounds and missing school due to feeling unsafe. Victims of dating abuse are also more likely to experience depression and anxiety, and to consider suicide, than their non-abused peers.

All of this negatively affects academic achievement. Yet in the face of mounting evidence of harm—and several decades of research and analysis—addressing teen dating violence remains a low priority in public schools, according to a new report published in the peer-reviewed journal Violence and Gender.

[For more on this story by MELINDA D. ANDERSON, go to https://www.theatlantic.com/ed...hools-ignore/547604/]

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I worked as an Intern last school year at my county's domestic violence center.  I could not agree more that the Interpersonal Violence issues experienced by teens is largely ignored and swept under the rug.  I have seen some inroads in my county's public school district via the kids' health classes.  Our school district also sponsors a yearly teen healthy relationships event, held on a weekend in the Spring.  I had one adolescent as a client last Spring and I encouraged her to attend this function.  Her response, while not surprising, was disappointing:  She told me that she didn't want to be "seen" by other former classmates because that would signal to them that she was a victim.  The peer pressure felt by kids at this age makes it so difficult to seek help at public events like this one (she was court-ordered to come to our program).  High school aged kids require privacy, respect, and dignity when confronting these issues to help prevent other issues from cropping up if they openly admitted their experiences.

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