1 / 31

Breaking the Stereotype of At-Risk Students

Breaking the Stereotype of At-Risk Students. November 11 th , 2011. Introductions. Katie Burton Kara Larkin. Goals for this session:. Who are at-risk youth? Characteristics of at-risk youth Challenges Strategies Guidance lessons. Who are at-risk youth ?. Definition:.

dermot
Télécharger la présentation

Breaking the Stereotype of At-Risk Students

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Breaking the Stereotype of At-Risk Students November 11th , 2011

  2. Introductions • Katie Burton • Kara Larkin

  3. Goals for this session: • Who are at-risk youth? • Characteristics of at-risk youth • Challenges • Strategies • Guidance lessons

  4. Who are at-risk youth?

  5. Definition: At-risk youth are children who are more likely to drop out of school due to a variety of demographic, socioeconomic, and institutional characteristics.

  6. Some characteristics of at-risk youth: • Chronic poverty • Single parent • Bad grades • Toxic environment • Negative peer influence • Drug use • Absence from school • Low motivation and self-esteem • Homelessness • Poor social skills

  7. If a teen is experiencing more than four of the following warning signs, they could be at-risk. • Has the teen ever been suspended, expelled, been truant, or had their grades drop? • Is the teen verbally abusive? • Does the teen struggle with basic family rules and expectations? • Does the parent have difficulty getting the teen to do basic household chores and homework? • Has the teen had problems with the law? • Does the parent have to pick their words carefully when speaking to the teen, so as not to elicit a verbal attack or even rage from them? • Is the teen in danger of dropping out of high school? • Does the teen associate with a suspect peer group? • Has the teen lost interest in former productive activities, sports, hobbies, or childhood friends? • Has the teen ever displayed any evidence of suicide? • Does the teen seem depressed or withdrawn? • Is the teen sexually promiscuous? • Has the teen’s appearance or personal hygiene changed? • Is the teen deceitful and manipulative? • Has the teen been caught stealing money or personal items from their family? • Is the teen severely lacking in motivation? • Does the teen sometimes lie regarding their activities? • Does the teen display outbursts of temper? • Does the teen lack self-worth and self-esteem? • Does the teen defy established rules regardless of the consequences? • When trying to deal with the teen, do the parents feel powerless? • Does the teen have a problem with authority? • Do the parents suspect the teen is experimenting with drugs or alcohol? • Does the teen ever display violent behavior?

  8. Risk along a continuum Students from low income, low skill, low education families are twice as likely to drop out as students from affluent families. (from Randall Grayson, PhD.)

  9. Strategies • Family • Self • Friends/Mentor • School • Community

  10. Family • Focus groups • Supportive family member • Community Resources • Involvement • Relationships

  11. Self • Self-esteem • Motivation • Empowerment • Social skills • Ignite Hope • Control • Relationships

  12. Friends & Mentors • Positive peer influence • Mediation • Problem-solving • Mentor • Relationships

  13. School • Basic skills • High Expectations • Proper classroom placements • School involvement • Relationships What does my student need right now?

  14. Community • Connectedness • Philanthropy • Relationships • Opportunity for positive activity

  15. Guidance Lessons • Stereotype Lesson • Diversity Activity • Meyers Briggs • Question Ball • Healthy vs. Unhealthy Relationships • Speakers • Career options

  16. Resources Grayson, Randall, Ph.D. “At-Risk Youth and Resilience Factors”. www.visionrealization.com. 10 October 2011. Bradley, Michael J. “Who is At-Risk”. www.at-risk.org 10 October 2011. Oakes, Duane D. Elise Sweet, and Mutinkhe Kaunda. “Challenges and Strategies: Working with At-Risk Youth”. www.mesacc.edu. 12 October 2011 A good resource for counselor’s: http://at-risk.com/

More Related