Difference between revisions of "Measures"

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the use of devices or materials designed to obstruct the vandal by physical
 
the use of devices or materials designed to obstruct the vandal by physical
 
barriers:
 
barriers:
1. Toughened glass (acrylic, polycarbon, etc.)
+
# Toughened glass (acrylic, polycarbon, etc.)
2. Latticework or screens to cover windows
+
# Latticework or screens to cover windows
3. Fire-retardant paint
+
# Fire-retardant paint
4. High-impact plastic or steel fixtures
+
# High-impact plastic or steel fixtures
5. Hardened rubber or plastic swing seats
+
# Hardened rubber or plastic swing seats
6. Concrete or steel picnic tables, benches, bleachers
+
# Concrete or steel picnic tables, benches, bleachers
7. Trash receptacles bolted to concrete bases
+
# Trash receptacles bolted to concrete bases
8. Rough-play-tolerant adventure playgrounds
+
# Rough-play-tolerant adventure playgrounds
9. Original planting of large-diameter trees
+
# Original planting of large-diameter trees
10. Slashproof transit vehicle seats
+
# Slashproof transit vehicle seats
11. Steel-framed bus seats
+
# Steel-framed bus seats
12. Antigraffiti repellent spray on bus seats
+
# Antigraffiti repellent spray on bus seats
13. Tamperproof sign hardware and fasteners
+
# Tamperproof sign hardware and fasteners
14. Door anchor hinges with nonremovable pins
+
# Door anchor hinges with nonremovable pins
   
 
II. Access control. This approach involves architectural features, mechanical
 
II. Access control. This approach involves architectural features, mechanical
 
and electronic devices, and related means for maintaining prerogatives
 
and electronic devices, and related means for maintaining prerogatives
 
over the ability to gain entry:
 
over the ability to gain entry:
15. Key control systems
+
# Key control systems
16. Locked gates, doors, windows
+
# Locked gates, doors, windows
17. Electromagnetic doors unopenable from outside
+
# Electromagnetic doors unopenable from outside
18. Deadbolt and vertical-bolt locks
+
# Deadbolt and vertical-bolt locks
19. Metal door/window shutters
+
# Metal door/window shutters
20. Protective grills over roof access openings
+
# Protective grills over roof access openings
21. Fenced yards
+
# Fenced yards
22. Vertical metal or small-mesh (unclimbable) fencing
+
# Vertical metal or small-mesh (unclimbable) fencing
23. Reduced number of building entrances
+
# Reduced number of building entrances
24. Unclimbable trees/bushes planted next to building
+
# Unclimbable trees/bushes planted next to building
25. Prickly bushes planted next to site to be protected
+
# Prickly bushes planted next to site to be protected
26. Sloped windowsills
+
# Sloped windowsills
27. Elimination of crank and gear window mechanisms
+
# Elimination of crank and gear window mechanisms
28. Steeply angled roofs with parapets and ridges
+
# Steeply angled roofs with parapets and ridges
29. Use of guard dogs
+
# Use of guard dogs
30. Use of student photo identification
+
# Use of student photo identification
31. Partitioning off of selected areas during "downtime" hours
+
# Partitioning off of selected areas during "downtime" hours
32. High curbs along areas to be protected
+
# High curbs along areas to be protected
   
 
III. Deflecting offenders. This is the channeling of potentially criminal
 
III. Deflecting offenders. This is the channeling of potentially criminal
 
or aggressive behavior in more prosocial directions by means of architectural,
 
or aggressive behavior in more prosocial directions by means of architectural,
 
equipment, and related alterations:
 
equipment, and related alterations:
33. Graffiti boards, mural programs
+
# Graffiti boards, mural programs
34. Schools/studios to give graffiti writers exposure and recognition
+
# Schools/studios to give graffiti writers exposure and recognition
35. Interesting wallpaper, daily newspaper, chalkboard on bathroom wall
+
# Interesting wallpaper, daily newspaper, chalkboard on bathroom wall
36. Litter bins
+
# Litter bins
37. Wash fountains and towel dispensers in school hallways
+
# Wash fountains and towel dispensers in school hallways
38. Steering of pathway circulation:
+
# Steering of pathway circulation:
Paving the shortest walk between connecting points
+
* Paving the shortest walk between connecting points
Avoiding sharp changes in direction
+
* Avoiding sharp changes in direction
Paving natural shortcuts after demonstrated use
+
* Paving natural shortcuts after demonstrated use
Installing or landscaping traffic barriers (e.g., benches, bushes)
+
* Installing or landscaping traffic barriers (e.g., benches, bushes)
39. "Next step" posters on broken equipment
+
# "Next step" posters on broken equipment
   
IV. Controlling facilitators. This is the alteration of the means to criminal
+
IV. Controlling facilitators. This is the alteration of the means to criminal or aggressive behavior by making such means less available, less accessible, or less potentially injurious:
 
# Control over sales of spray paint and indelible markers
or aggressive behavior by making such means less available, less accessible,
 
 
# Removal of debris from construction/demolition sites
or less potentially injurious:
 
 
# Removal of waste paper, rubbish, and other combustibles
40. Control over sales of spray paint and indelible markers
 
 
# Use of tamperproof screws
41. Removal of debris from construction/demolition sites
 
 
# Placement of permanent signs, building names, and decorative hardware
42. Removal of waste paper, rubbish, and other combustibles
 
43. Use of tamperproof screws
 
44. Placement of permanent signs, building names, and decorative hardware
 
 
out of reach from ground
 
out of reach from ground
45. Placement of school thermostats, fire alarms, and light switches far
+
# Placement of school thermostats, fire alarms, and light switches far
 
from "hang-out" areas
 
from "hang-out" areas
   
V. Exit-entry screening. Instead of seeking to exclude potential perpetrators
+
V. Exit-entry screening. Instead of seeking to exclude potential perpetrators (as in access control), this set of tactics seeks to increase the likelihood of detecting persons who are not in conformity with entry requirements (entry screening) or detecting the attempted removal of objects that should not be removed from protected areas (exit screening):
 
# Closed-circuit TV
(as in access control), this set of tactics seeks to increase the likelihood
 
 
# Metal detectors
of detecting persons who are not in conformity with entry requirements
 
 
# Vibration detectors
(entry screening) or detecting the attempted removal of objects that should
 
 
# Motion detectors
not be removed from protected areas (exit screening):
 
 
# Perimeter alarm system
46. Closed-circuit TV
 
 
# Library book tags
47. Metal detectors
 
48. Vibration detectors
 
49. Motion detectors
 
50. Perimeter alarm system
 
51. Library book tags
 
   
 
VI. Formal surveillance. This is surveillance by police, guards, monitors,
 
VI. Formal surveillance. This is surveillance by police, guards, monitors,
 
citizen groups, or other paid or volunteer security personnel:
 
citizen groups, or other paid or volunteer security personnel:
52. Police, citizen, senior citizen, tenant, parent patrols
+
# Police, citizen, senior citizen, tenant, parent patrols
53. Neighborhood Watch, School Watch, Block Watch, Rail/Bus Watch
+
# Neighborhood Watch, School Watch, Block Watch, Rail/Bus Watch
 
groups
 
groups
54. Provision of on-site living quarters for citizens or security personnel
+
# Provision of on-site living quarters for citizens or security personnel
 
(e.g., "school sitters," "campground hosts")
 
(e.g., "school sitters," "campground hosts")
55. Informant hotlines (e.g., "rat-on-a-rat program," "secret witness
+
# Informant hotlines (e.g., "rat-on-a-rat program," "secret witness
 
program")
 
program")
56. Crime Solvers Anonymous reward program
+
# Crime Solvers Anonymous reward program
57. Mechanical, ultrasonic, infrared, electronic intruder alarm systems
+
# Mechanical, ultrasonic, infrared, electronic intruder alarm systems
58. Automatic fire detection systems
+
# Automatic fire detection systems
59. After-hours use of school public address system for monitoring
+
# After-hours use of school public address system for monitoring
   
 
VII. Natural surveillance. This is surveillance provided by employees,
 
VII. Natural surveillance. This is surveillance provided by employees,
 
home owners, pedestrians, and others going about their regular daily
 
home owners, pedestrians, and others going about their regular daily
 
activities:
 
activities:
60. Community after-school use
+
# Community after-school use
61. Reduced teacher-student ratio
+
# Reduced teacher-student ratio
62. Increased number of employees (e.g., playground supervisors, bus
+
# Increased number of employees (e.g., playground supervisors, bus
 
conductors, teachers)
 
conductors, teachers)
63. Round-the-clock custodial staffing
+
# Round-the-clock custodial staffing
64. Live-in custodian/caretaker
+
# Live-in custodian/caretaker
65. Distribution of faculty/staff offices throughout the school
+
# Distribution of faculty/staff offices throughout the school
66. Assignment of additional faculty/staff members to hall, cafeteria
+
# Assignment of additional faculty/staff members to hall, cafeteria
 
duty
 
duty
67. "Youth vacation vigil" student surveillance program
+
# "Youth vacation vigil" student surveillance program
68. Use of bus/train employees to report vandalism on their routes
+
# Use of bus/train employees to report vandalism on their routes
69. Improved exterior and interior lighting
+
# Improved exterior and interior lighting
70. Low trimming of shrubbery and plants
+
# Low trimming of shrubbery and plants
   
VIII. Target removal. This is the physical removal or enhanced inaccessibility
+
VIII. Target removal. This is the physical removal or enhanced inaccessibility of potential vandalism targets:
 
# Use of graffiti dissuaders
of potential vandalism targets:
 
 
* Teflon, plastic laminate, fiberglass, or melamine covering
71. Use of graffiti dissuaders
 
 
* Rock cement, slanted siding, or deeply grooved surfaces
Teflon, plastic laminate, fiberglass, or melamine covering
 
 
* "Paint-outs" or use of contrasting colors in patterned surfaces
Rock cement, slanted siding, or deeply grooved surfaces
 
 
* Fast-growing wall vines or shrubbery, or construction of wall
"Paint-outs" or use of contrasting colors in patterned surfaces
 
Fast-growing wall vines or shrubbery, or construction of wall
 
 
barriers
 
barriers
72. Removal of pay phones from high-loitering areas
+
# Removal of pay phones from high-loitering areas
73. Removal of corner bus seats, hidden from driver's view
+
# Removal of corner bus seats, hidden from driver's view
74. Removal of outside plant bulbs
+
# Removal of outside plant bulbs
75. Windowless school or other buildings
+
# Windowless school or other buildings
76. Omission of ground-level windows
+
# Omission of ground-level windows
77. Concealed school door closers
+
# Concealed school door closers
78. Concealed pipework
+
# Concealed pipework
79. Fittings moved out of reach (e.g., from wall to ceiling)
+
# Fittings moved out of reach (e.g., from wall to ceiling)
80. Signs/fixtures made flush with wall or ceiling
+
# Signs/fixtures made flush with wall or ceiling
81. Key-controlled light fixtures in public areas
+
# Key-controlled light fixtures in public areas
82. Removal of (or no replanting of) easily damaged trees/bushes
+
# Removal of (or no replanting of) easily damaged trees/bushes
  +
IX. Identifying property. This is the physical identification marking of
 
potential vandalism targets:
+
IX. Identifying property. This is the physical identification marking of potential vandalism targets:
83. Property marking with school district identification
+
# Property marking with school district identification
84. Property marking with business logo
+
# Property marking with business logo
85. Property marking with identification seals
+
# Property marking with identification seals
86. Property marking with organization stencil
+
# Property marking with organization stencil
87. Property marking with individual's Social Security number
+
# Property marking with individual's Social Security number
   
 
X. Removing inducements. This is the physical alteration of potential
 
X. Removing inducements. This is the physical alteration of potential
 
vandalism targets:
 
vandalism targets:
88. Rapid repair of damaged property
+
# Rapid repair of damaged property
89. Rapid removal of graffiti
+
# Rapid removal of graffiti
90. Use of small windowpanes
+
# Use of small windowpanes
91. Elimination of school washroom and toilet stall doors
+
# Elimination of school washroom and toilet stall doors
92. Elimination of bars over toilet stall doorways
+
# Elimination of bars over toilet stall doorways
93. School restroom thermostats kept at 62°F
+
# School restroom thermostats kept at 62°F
94. Removal of gates and fences
+
# Removal of gates and fences
95. Repainting of playground equipment in bright colors
+
# Repainting of playground equipment in bright colors
96. Beautification programs (e.g., landscaping, painting, maintenance)
+
# Beautification programs (e.g., landscaping, painting, maintenance)
   
 
XL Rule setting. This is the making of explicit prior statements about
 
XL Rule setting. This is the making of explicit prior statements about
 
acceptable and unacceptable behaviors, as well as about penalties for
 
acceptable and unacceptable behaviors, as well as about penalties for
 
noncompliance:
 
noncompliance:
97. Model "hate crime" bill
+
# Model "hate crime" bill
98. Antivandalism laws
+
# Antivandalism laws
99. Building design specifications
+
# Building design specifications
100. Building security codes
+
# Building security codes
101. Parental liability statutes
+
# Parental liability statutes
102. Prohibition of sale of spray paint and indelible markers
+
# Prohibition of sale of spray paint and indelible markers
103. Codes of rights and responsibilities
+
# Codes of rights and responsibilities
104. School rules of student conduct
+
# School rules of student conduct
105. Rigorous, irregular, no-warning fire drills
+
# Rigorous, irregular, no-warning fire drills
   
XII. Education. These are direct efforts to dissuade potential and actual
+
XII. Education. These are direct efforts to dissuade potential and actual vandals by informing them about vandalism costs, consequences, and alternatives:
 
# Vandalism education programs
vandals by informing them about vandalism costs, consequences, and
 
  +
# Arson education programs
alternatives:
 
106. Vandalism education programs
+
# Vandalism awareness walks
 
# Vandalism case study classroom discussions
107. Arson education programs
 
 
# Classroom brainstorming on vandalism reduction
108. Vandalism awareness walks
 
 
# Year-round education
109. Vandalism case study classroom discussions
 
 
# Student orientation handbook and meetings
110. Classroom brainstorming on vandalism reduction
 
 
# Multicultural sensitivity training
112. Year-round education
 
  +
# Antivandalism lectures by older students to younger ones
113. Student orientation handbook and meetings
 
 
# Antivandalism films
114. Multicultural sensitivity training
 
115. Antivandalism lectures by older students to younger ones
+
# Antivandalism games
116. Antivandalism films
+
# Antivandalism slide or tape program
117. Antivandalism games
+
# Antivandalism brochures
 
# "Ride with pride" antivandalism transit program
118. Antivandalism slide or tape program
 
119. Antivandalism brochures
 
120. "Ride with pride" antivandalism transit program
 
   
XIII. Publicity. These are indirect efforts to inform potential and actual
+
XIII. Publicity. These are indirect efforts to inform potential and actual vandals, as well as the general public, about vandalism costs, consequences, and alternatives:
 
# Antivandalism advertising
vandals, as well as the general public, about vandalism costs, consequences,
 
 
# Antivandalism news releases
and alternatives:
 
 
# Milk carton/grocery bag antivandalism messages
121. Antivandalism advertising
 
122. Antivandalism news releases
+
# Antivandalism decals on mass transit vehicles
  +
# Antivandalism slogan contests
123. Milk carton/grocery bag antivandalism messages
 
 
# "Sign amnesty" day (a day of no fines or other penalties for those
124. Antivandalism decals on mass transit vehicles
 
125. Antivandalism slogan contests
 
126. "Sign amnesty" day (a day of no fines or other penalties for those
 
 
who return stolen signs)
 
who return stolen signs)
127. "Help the playground" campaigns
+
# "Help the playground" campaigns
128. Antivandalism buttons, T-shirts, rulers, bookmarks, posters
+
# Antivandalism buttons, T-shirts, rulers, bookmarks, posters
   
XIV. Punishment. These are negative experiences directed to perpetrators
+
XIV. Punishment. These are negative experiences directed to perpetrators consequent to their vandaiistic behavior:
 
# Suspension from school
consequent to their vandaiistic behavior:
 
 
# Monetary fines
129. Suspension from school
 
 
# Restitution
130. Monetary fines
 
 
# Student vandalism account
131. Restitution
 
 
# Group billing for residence hall damage
132. Student vandalism account
 
133. Group billing for residence hall damage
 
   
 
XV. Counseling. These are remedial experiences directed to perpetrators
 
XV. Counseling. These are remedial experiences directed to perpetrators
 
consequent to their vandaiistic behavior:
 
consequent to their vandaiistic behavior:
134. Student counseling programs
+
# Student counseling programs
135. Conflict negotiation skills training
+
# Conflict negotiation skills training
136. Moral reasoning training
+
# Moral reasoning training
137. Interpersonal skills training
+
# Interpersonal skills training
138. Aggression replacement training
+
# Aggression replacement training
139. Behavior modification treatment for arson
+
# Behavior modification treatment for arson
Stimulus satiation
+
* Stimulus satiation
Contingency management
+
* Contingency management
Assertion training
+
* Assertion training
   
XVI. Involvement. These are efforts to increase the sense of involvement
+
XVI. Involvement. These are efforts to increase the sense of involvement with and ownership of potential vandalism targets:
 
# Encouraging students in residence halls to personalize (paint, furnish) their rooms
with and ownership of potential vandalism targets:
 
140. Encouraging students in residence halls to personalize (paint, furnish)
+
# Permitting students in residence halls to retain same room several
their rooms
 
141. Permitting students in residence halls to retain same room several
 
 
semesters
 
semesters
142. Student participation in school decision making
+
# Student participation in school decision making
143. School administration collaboration with student organizations
+
# School administration collaboration with student organizations
144. School-home collaboration
+
# School-home collaboration
145. Hiring of unemployed youths as subway vandalism inspectors
+
# Hiring of unemployed youths as subway vandalism inspectors
146. "Adopt-a-station" antivandalism program
+
# "Adopt-a-station" antivandalism program
   
 
XVII. Organizational climate. These are procedures for enhancing the
 
XVII. Organizational climate. These are procedures for enhancing the
 
quality of the potential or actual vandal's social/educational/daily living
 
quality of the potential or actual vandal's social/educational/daily living
 
context:
 
context:
147. Teacher/staff approval/reward for student prosocial behaviors
+
# Teacher/staff approval/reward for student prosocial behaviors
148. Teacher respect toward students
+
# Teacher respect toward students
149. Teacher/parent modeling of respect for others and for property
+
# Teacher/parent modeling of respect for others and for property
150. Regular, visible presence of school principal
+
# Regular, visible presence of school principal
151. Involvement of school principal in community activities
+
# Involvement of school principal in community activities
152. School curriculum revision
+
# School curriculum revision
153. Improved student-custodian relationships
+
# Improved student-custodian relationships
154. Improved school-community relationships
+
# Improved school-community relationships
155. Reorganization of large schools into schools-within-a-school or
+
# Reorganization of large schools into schools-within-a-school or
 
house plans
 
house plans
   

Revision as of 15:08, 16 August 2012


Measures

This page is a placeholder for measures that need to be inserted in other pages

I. Target hardening. This situational crime prevention approach involves the use of devices or materials designed to obstruct the vandal by physical barriers:

  1. Toughened glass (acrylic, polycarbon, etc.)
  2. Latticework or screens to cover windows
  3. Fire-retardant paint
  4. High-impact plastic or steel fixtures
  5. Hardened rubber or plastic swing seats
  6. Concrete or steel picnic tables, benches, bleachers
  7. Trash receptacles bolted to concrete bases
  8. Rough-play-tolerant adventure playgrounds
  9. Original planting of large-diameter trees
  10. Slashproof transit vehicle seats
  11. Steel-framed bus seats
  12. Antigraffiti repellent spray on bus seats
  13. Tamperproof sign hardware and fasteners
  14. Door anchor hinges with nonremovable pins

II. Access control. This approach involves architectural features, mechanical and electronic devices, and related means for maintaining prerogatives over the ability to gain entry:

  1. Key control systems
  2. Locked gates, doors, windows
  3. Electromagnetic doors unopenable from outside
  4. Deadbolt and vertical-bolt locks
  5. Metal door/window shutters
  6. Protective grills over roof access openings
  7. Fenced yards
  8. Vertical metal or small-mesh (unclimbable) fencing
  9. Reduced number of building entrances
  10. Unclimbable trees/bushes planted next to building
  11. Prickly bushes planted next to site to be protected
  12. Sloped windowsills
  13. Elimination of crank and gear window mechanisms
  14. Steeply angled roofs with parapets and ridges
  15. Use of guard dogs
  16. Use of student photo identification
  17. Partitioning off of selected areas during "downtime" hours
  18. High curbs along areas to be protected

III. Deflecting offenders. This is the channeling of potentially criminal or aggressive behavior in more prosocial directions by means of architectural, equipment, and related alterations:

  1. Graffiti boards, mural programs
  2. Schools/studios to give graffiti writers exposure and recognition
  3. Interesting wallpaper, daily newspaper, chalkboard on bathroom wall
  4. Litter bins
  5. Wash fountains and towel dispensers in school hallways
  6. Steering of pathway circulation:
  • Paving the shortest walk between connecting points
  • Avoiding sharp changes in direction
  • Paving natural shortcuts after demonstrated use
  • Installing or landscaping traffic barriers (e.g., benches, bushes)
  1. "Next step" posters on broken equipment

IV. Controlling facilitators. This is the alteration of the means to criminal or aggressive behavior by making such means less available, less accessible, or less potentially injurious:

  1. Control over sales of spray paint and indelible markers
  2. Removal of debris from construction/demolition sites
  3. Removal of waste paper, rubbish, and other combustibles
  4. Use of tamperproof screws
  5. Placement of permanent signs, building names, and decorative hardware

out of reach from ground

  1. Placement of school thermostats, fire alarms, and light switches far

from "hang-out" areas

V. Exit-entry screening. Instead of seeking to exclude potential perpetrators (as in access control), this set of tactics seeks to increase the likelihood of detecting persons who are not in conformity with entry requirements (entry screening) or detecting the attempted removal of objects that should not be removed from protected areas (exit screening):

  1. Closed-circuit TV
  2. Metal detectors
  3. Vibration detectors
  4. Motion detectors
  5. Perimeter alarm system
  6. Library book tags

VI. Formal surveillance. This is surveillance by police, guards, monitors, citizen groups, or other paid or volunteer security personnel:

  1. Police, citizen, senior citizen, tenant, parent patrols
  2. Neighborhood Watch, School Watch, Block Watch, Rail/Bus Watch

groups

  1. Provision of on-site living quarters for citizens or security personnel

(e.g., "school sitters," "campground hosts")

  1. Informant hotlines (e.g., "rat-on-a-rat program," "secret witness

program")

  1. Crime Solvers Anonymous reward program
  2. Mechanical, ultrasonic, infrared, electronic intruder alarm systems
  3. Automatic fire detection systems
  4. After-hours use of school public address system for monitoring

VII. Natural surveillance. This is surveillance provided by employees, home owners, pedestrians, and others going about their regular daily activities:

  1. Community after-school use
  2. Reduced teacher-student ratio
  3. Increased number of employees (e.g., playground supervisors, bus

conductors, teachers)

  1. Round-the-clock custodial staffing
  2. Live-in custodian/caretaker
  3. Distribution of faculty/staff offices throughout the school
  4. Assignment of additional faculty/staff members to hall, cafeteria

duty

  1. "Youth vacation vigil" student surveillance program
  2. Use of bus/train employees to report vandalism on their routes
  3. Improved exterior and interior lighting
  4. Low trimming of shrubbery and plants

VIII. Target removal. This is the physical removal or enhanced inaccessibility of potential vandalism targets:

  1. Use of graffiti dissuaders
  • Teflon, plastic laminate, fiberglass, or melamine covering
  • Rock cement, slanted siding, or deeply grooved surfaces
  • "Paint-outs" or use of contrasting colors in patterned surfaces
  • Fast-growing wall vines or shrubbery, or construction of wall

barriers

  1. Removal of pay phones from high-loitering areas
  2. Removal of corner bus seats, hidden from driver's view
  3. Removal of outside plant bulbs
  4. Windowless school or other buildings
  5. Omission of ground-level windows
  6. Concealed school door closers
  7. Concealed pipework
  8. Fittings moved out of reach (e.g., from wall to ceiling)
  9. Signs/fixtures made flush with wall or ceiling
  10. Key-controlled light fixtures in public areas
  11. Removal of (or no replanting of) easily damaged trees/bushes

IX. Identifying property. This is the physical identification marking of potential vandalism targets:

  1. Property marking with school district identification
  2. Property marking with business logo
  3. Property marking with identification seals
  4. Property marking with organization stencil
  5. Property marking with individual's Social Security number

X. Removing inducements. This is the physical alteration of potential vandalism targets:

  1. Rapid repair of damaged property
  2. Rapid removal of graffiti
  3. Use of small windowpanes
  4. Elimination of school washroom and toilet stall doors
  5. Elimination of bars over toilet stall doorways
  6. School restroom thermostats kept at 62°F
  7. Removal of gates and fences
  8. Repainting of playground equipment in bright colors
  9. Beautification programs (e.g., landscaping, painting, maintenance)

XL Rule setting. This is the making of explicit prior statements about acceptable and unacceptable behaviors, as well as about penalties for noncompliance:

  1. Model "hate crime" bill
  2. Antivandalism laws
  3. Building design specifications
  4. Building security codes
  5. Parental liability statutes
  6. Prohibition of sale of spray paint and indelible markers
  7. Codes of rights and responsibilities
  8. School rules of student conduct
  9. Rigorous, irregular, no-warning fire drills

XII. Education. These are direct efforts to dissuade potential and actual vandals by informing them about vandalism costs, consequences, and alternatives:

  1. Vandalism education programs
  2. Arson education programs
  3. Vandalism awareness walks
  4. Vandalism case study classroom discussions
  5. Classroom brainstorming on vandalism reduction
  6. Year-round education
  7. Student orientation handbook and meetings
  8. Multicultural sensitivity training
  9. Antivandalism lectures by older students to younger ones
  10. Antivandalism films
  11. Antivandalism games
  12. Antivandalism slide or tape program
  13. Antivandalism brochures
  14. "Ride with pride" antivandalism transit program

XIII. Publicity. These are indirect efforts to inform potential and actual vandals, as well as the general public, about vandalism costs, consequences, and alternatives:

  1. Antivandalism advertising
  2. Antivandalism news releases
  3. Milk carton/grocery bag antivandalism messages
  4. Antivandalism decals on mass transit vehicles
  5. Antivandalism slogan contests
  6. "Sign amnesty" day (a day of no fines or other penalties for those

who return stolen signs)

  1. "Help the playground" campaigns
  2. Antivandalism buttons, T-shirts, rulers, bookmarks, posters

XIV. Punishment. These are negative experiences directed to perpetrators consequent to their vandaiistic behavior:

  1. Suspension from school
  2. Monetary fines
  3. Restitution
  4. Student vandalism account
  5. Group billing for residence hall damage

XV. Counseling. These are remedial experiences directed to perpetrators consequent to their vandaiistic behavior:

  1. Student counseling programs
  2. Conflict negotiation skills training
  3. Moral reasoning training
  4. Interpersonal skills training
  5. Aggression replacement training
  6. Behavior modification treatment for arson
  • Stimulus satiation
  • Contingency management
  • Assertion training

XVI. Involvement. These are efforts to increase the sense of involvement with and ownership of potential vandalism targets:

  1. Encouraging students in residence halls to personalize (paint, furnish) their rooms
  2. Permitting students in residence halls to retain same room several

semesters

  1. Student participation in school decision making
  2. School administration collaboration with student organizations
  3. School-home collaboration
  4. Hiring of unemployed youths as subway vandalism inspectors
  5. "Adopt-a-station" antivandalism program

XVII. Organizational climate. These are procedures for enhancing the quality of the potential or actual vandal's social/educational/daily living context:

  1. Teacher/staff approval/reward for student prosocial behaviors
  2. Teacher respect toward students
  3. Teacher/parent modeling of respect for others and for property
  4. Regular, visible presence of school principal
  5. Involvement of school principal in community activities
  6. School curriculum revision
  7. Improved student-custodian relationships
  8. Improved school-community relationships
  9. Reorganization of large schools into schools-within-a-school or

house plans

Footnotes and references

MAP

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