| |
 |
| |
 |
| _______________________ |
| Cover design: Amelia Ives |
| Copyright ©2006 Ives Design |
| All rights reserved |
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
| Since the 1999 Columbine tragedy...
when two boys who were bullied committed the worst school shooting
in U.S. history, numerous schools have implemented anti-bullying programs
with uneven success. Others have used zero-tolerance discipline, resulting
in children being suspended, expelled, and arrested for increasingly
ridiculous reasons. |
| A Colorado family thinks it’s
time for a return to common-sense discipline.
Author Louise Benson describes the family’s
ordeal with their son’s persecution by Christian bullies in
a Boulder County public charter school. She recounts the expulsion
and bizarre felony charges pursued by the school and the police when
the boy confided to a counselor thoughts of killing himself and the
bullies. A year later, another persecuted student attempted suicide,
and others came forward about religious and racial intolerance at
the charter school. |
| How could this happen in liberal Boulder?
The answer, revealed in Dr. Benson’s fight for reform, is a
mix of Colorado’s red/blue politics and bureaucratic defensiveness.
She also shows that many anti-bullying programs are outdated, and
warns that charter schools may contribute to resegregation and intolerance.
A national reappraisal of zero tolerance, which is supported by extensive
research, is the goal of Scapegoating for Columbine: Collateral Damage
in the War on School Violence. |
 |
| ISBN: 0-595-40614-9 |
|
Price: $16.95 |
| Published: February 2007 |
|
Size: 6" x 9" |
| Format: Paperback |
|
Pages: 194 |
|
|
|
|