I highly recommend this book to anyone attempting to maintain a preventive behavioral threat assessment system, as well as anyone interested in implementing a threat assessment system for a school or community. The template offered provides an excellent navigation chart for starting or refining a system, and the examples cover a broad stroke of threats and behavior types, making for excellent tabletop discussions and practice. The authors remind us that we can identify youths who are on the pathway to violence, and we can use the principles of behavioral threat assessment and the creative responses of professionals to find the pathway back to a constructive, connected life.
— J. Reid Meloy, Forensic Psychologist, PhD, ABPP; Co-Editor, International Handbook of Threat Assessment, Second Edition
John Van Dreal, Courtenay McCarthy, and Coleen Van Dreal are professionals who have actually done the prevention work and developed successful intervention plans for students in crisis. Using inclusion, connection, and the addition of protective factors, they have been instrumental in redirecting troubled youths away from pathways that are destructive and back to prosocial, positive, and successful experiences in education. If your goal is to create safe school environments that graduate learners who will move forward in their lives as educated, happy, responsible citizens, then this book will help you through its example.
— Sandy Husk, PhD, CEO AVID (Advancement via Individual Determination)
While many schools and Institutions have embraced the benefits of having active threat assessment teams, many of those teams have not kept pace with research-based training and proven prevention methods that include a pro-student approach, social and emotional connections, and strategies that lead away from expulsion, arrest, and detention. Threat assessment programs cannot thrive and accomplish their mission to identify youths on the pathway to potential violence and prevent that violence without linking their system development with well-rounded, research-based sources. This book not only acknowledges the need to evolve threat management to interventions with a large scope of prevention efforts but clearly demonstrates the “how to” through an examination of seven engaging and intriguing case studies that transformed lives.
— William Modzelelski, associate assistant deputy secretary (retired), U.S. Department of Education, Office of Safe and Drug-Free Schools
A great resource and guide for school and district leaders based on actual, practical, and relevant scenarios and events. A must-read for educators and those who work on ensuring and maintaining student safety in a school setting. The authors are actual practitioners with decades of firsthand knowledge and experience in how to manage, facilitate, and resolve such critical and complex situations and incidents.
— Salam A. Noor, PhD, former chief state schools officer for Oregon and currently president and CEO of Education Consultants International, LLC.
This book illuminates both the logistical and programmatical steps in assuring a successful assessment program through a lens of equity, which often goes overlooked in the analysis of behavioral threats on our school campuses. Through student voice, schools can capitalize on what matters most, balancing inclusion and restorative practices in a manner that is fair for all.
— Hank Gutierrez
The Salem-Keizer Cascade Model provides our six-county region in Western Colorado with a preventative, proactive system grounded in collaboration to keep children safe. Its power is showcased in these case studies. While there is no simple solution to assessing threats, the model embraces the “grey” of these situations while empowering threat assessment teams with interventions for the student exhibiting threatening behavior that are not necessarily reliant on the courts or the mental health system. This system reminds communities that they can effect change through relationships, and it helps remove emotion and fear from a community response. It has made our region safer.
— James R. Pavlich, executive director of operations, Montrose County School District, Montrose, Colorado