How do those numbers I've cited above stack up against what is going on outside of campuses? It's not exactly an apples-to-apples comparison but for some context: The juvenile violent crime arrest rate has been declining steadily since 1994 and it now hovers around 400 arrests per 100,000 juvenile ages 10-17. Basically, that equates to about three juveniles out of every 750 kids. Not awful.
Similarly, the number of juveniles victimized each year in this country has dropped dramatically since early last decade. As of several years ago-the most recent data available-the juvenile victimization rate is somewhere around 25 per 1,000 kids ages 12-17.
Aside from the statistics suggesting that while high schools (and lower grade schools) in the United Sates are relatively-and comparatively-safer than perhaps many other locations juveniles visit, such as their homes or neighborhoods, the school safety panel at IACP offered some real, tangible and sensible ideas for reducing violence on campuses.
Heard often were such familiar notions as student discipline, increased accountability, intervention and alternative programs, random locker-inspections, increased emphasis on academic achievement, more involvement of local police in the schools, links to the community and law enforcement and so forth.
But what also rang true to this author and many of the chiefs of police in attendance I spoke with later, was this simple idea of "getting the local police more involved."