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Stop -
Dating Violence among Adolescents
Viraj - Prevention Program for Violence in Dating Relationship
Dating Violence
Stop - Workshop for school staff
WORKSHOP FOR SCHOOL STAFF
Coordination
à la condition féminine
Lisette Bédard, Coordinator
Christiane Miville-Deschênes, Project Coordinator
This document is based on the Session
de sensibilisation et d'information sur la violence dans les relations
amoureuses des jeunes s'adressant au personnel scolaire developed by
Francine Lavoie and Marjolaine Roy at Université Laval's École de psychologie.
We would like to thank them for their contribution.
All of the exercises and some of the text in this document are taken from STOP! Dating Violence among Adolescents-Classroom Activities, by
Francine
Lavoie, Annie Gosselin, Line Robitaille and Lucie Vézina.
Design
and Development
Véronique Billette
Nancy Cooper
Annie Gosselin
Serge Rock Leclerc
Christiane Miville‑Deschênes
Graphies
Monique Chaussé
Carole Henry
Translation
Services à la communauté
anglophone, Direction de la production en langue anglaise
Gouvernement
du Quebec
Ministère de l'Éducation, 1995
ISBN 2‑550‑25275‑6
Legal Deposit - 1995 - 95-1005
Bibliothèque nationale du Quebec
INTRODUCTION
Aggressive
behavior among adolescents is so common that we have come to tolerate violent
words and actions without being aware of it. The purpose of this workshop is to
make school. staff more aware of the need to intervene in preventing dating
violence among adolescents.
Violence
in intimate relationships is not physical at first. Before a couple gets to that
point, there are other, more subtle forms of abuse that are every bit as
destructive. Such forms of abuse slowly eat away at the victim, who begins to
accept the situation as "almost normal," and there lies the root of
the problem.
There
have been a number of studies conducted on violence against women. Research done
by universities, the Bureau de la statistique du Quebec and Statistics Canada
has all arrived at the same conclusion: one woman in eight is a victim of
conjugal violence.
There is a tendency to underestimate the
seriousness of violence among adolescents. Yet, the number of cases of dating
violence among adolescents is estimated at 20 percent' and 13 percent of
Secondary IV boys admit to having used sexual violence at least once.(
2 ). Behaviors
acquired during adolescence usually continue into adulthood.
There is a tendency also to underestimate the
importance and influence of intimate relationships among adolescents. For
adolescents, having a girlfriend or boyfriend is a means of attaining social
recognition; certain abusive behaviors are sometimes accepted in order to
maintain this recognition.
In order to be able to intervene in situations
related to violence in dating relationships, it is essential both to accept that
this violence exists and to question one's own ideas. Participants in this
workshop may be confronted with prejudices or myths so long‑standing that
they are deeply rooted.
'Shirley
Litch Mercer, «Not a Pretty Picture: An Exploratory Study of Violence Against
Women in High School Dating Relationships, * Resources for Feminist Research/Documentation sur la recherche
féministe, 17, 2 (1988): 15‑23.
2 Marie‑Hélène Gagné, *La violence dans les
relations amoureuses des adolescents et des adolescentes une étude
quantitative," unpublished dissertation (École de psychologie, Université
Laval, 1993), vol. 2, p. 28.
They
may, therefore, react with surprise or disagree with certain facts presented.
Some reactions may set in motion a process of questioning that will continue
after the workshop. The implementation of the STOP! program in schools may
encourage students to confide in resource persons and to request their help. It
is essential that the resource persons know where they stand psychologically
with regard to the problem. They will have to determine whether they feel able
to implement the STOP! program and to provide the adolescents who come to sec
them with support. The workshop is intended to help resource persons in this
role.
A BRIEF HISTORY
Today,
one out of every eight women is abused by her partner. Conjugal violence has led
women to join together to assert their right to women's shelters. In Quebec,
there are only 82 shelters for women victims of abuse and 24 therapy groups for
violent men, yet the demand is much greater. Women's shelters cannot accommodate
the population of abused women. In 1989‑90, the shelters took in 9 802
women and 6 053 children. Conjugal violence is equally present in every social
class and in all age groups.
Only six percent of abused women make use of
women's shelters. Statistics show that one of every five women in hospital
emergency wards are there because of a violent episode at home.
Between
1987 and 1991, 88 Quebec women were killed by their partners or
ex‑partners and 151 women were victims of attempted murder. In 1991, 10
226 cases of conjugal violence were reported to the police. Generally,
aggressors are fined and ordered to "keep the peace" and, sometimes,
to undergo therapy for violent men. Only a very few are sent to prison.
What
does this have to do with adolescents in Secondary III and IV?
Women
do not become abused and men do not become violent overnight. Abusive
relationships are the result of a long‑standing pattern of neglected
problem behaviors. That is why the STOP! program was developed. Violence in
intimate relationships is as common among adolescents as it is among adults.
There is no such thing as a typical victim of
dating violence. The submissive behaviors and weakness associated with victims
of dating violence are the result of abuse rather than personality traits.
It is a commonly held belief in our society
that women in violent relationships provoke their partners to the point of
abuse. Some people even think that abused women and girls are happy
with their situation, since they remain in it. This completely disregards the
social, intimate and family contexts, and the fear and stress that abuse causes.
Some abused adult women are able to, break the cycle of violence only after
approximately 35 violent episodes.
Abused
girls come to feel guilty and responsible for the abuse they believe they have
provoked; that is why so few girls and women cry out against it. The popular
belief that leaving an abusive partner will put an end to, the abuse is also
false. If the partner does not accept her leaving, the abuse and harassment may
escalate.
Also,
contrary to popular belief, alcohol and drug use is not a cause of violence;
rather, it is an external factor. Violent partners will, however, use this
excuse and others to play down the seriousness of their actions.
THE
CONCEPT OF VIOLENCE AS DEFINED IN THE STOP! PROGRAM
The
program deals only with violence experienced by adolescents in their dating
relationships with other adolescents. Although violence can and does exist in
homosexual relationships, because of the limited amount of time available for
the program the focus is on violence within heterosexual couples. The examples,
therefore, do not reflect other types of relationships.
It
cannot be denied that many forms of violence exist in relationships between
adolescents of all ages. For this reason, preventive measures should be adopted
as soon as adolescents begin dating.
The
STOP! program defines violence as any behavior that hinders the personal
development of another individual, compromising his or her physical,
psychological or sexual well‑being. Thus
1. According to the STOP! program, violence is an unacceptable behavior.
By definition, violence is not limited to physical abuse, but includes
all other forms of violence, which may, sooner or later, lead to physical abuse.
The main cause of violence is social
inequality between the sexes. Abusers express this inequality by controlling
their partners and considering only their own ends, to the detriment of the
other person. Some even go so far as to show contempt for their partners.
Emphasis must be placed on the role that learning (e.g. a history of family
abuse) and reinforcement (peer pressure) play in this violent behaviour.
Abusers are responsible for their own behavior.
Victims, especially of sexual abuse, are
usually girls. As for physical
abuse, the damage inflicted on girls is usually more serious than that inflicted on
boys
The preceding statement in no way implies that girls
are incapable of violent behavior. Often, their violence will be in the form of
self‑defense. However, studies show that reciprocal violence, and even
violence initiated by girls, does exist. Such violence among adolescent girls
usually disappears in time, since it is not reinforced by society.'
3 Francine Lavoie et al., STOP! Dating
Violence among Adolescents‑Classroom Activities (Quebec: ministère de
l'Éducation, 1995), p. 2‑3.
CLASSROOM
ACTIVITIES
This document contains the first section of the STOP! program, which includes
classroom and complementary activities. Classroom activities consist of two
60‑ to 75‑minute periods. The Personal and Social Education program,
as well as the Catholic Religious and Moral Instruction program, the Protestant
Moral and Religious Education program and the Moral Education program lend
themselves well to STOP! Themes. The themes may also be dealt with in other
courses.
It is essential that the messages conveyed be reinforced so, that attitudes and
behaviors begin to change. Schools are encouraged to commit to the project, and
all school personnel to participate in the workshop.
The STOP! Program addresses two main themes: control
and rights. The first step is to make students
aware of dating violence among adolescents. Time should be set aside for the
adolescents to become aware that this type of violence exists.
CAUSES
OF VIOLENCE AMONG ADOLESCENTS
The Model on Which the STOP! Program Is
Based
The social model attributes the causes of violence to, social inequality,
stereotypes and values. Some examples of this are different socialization for
boys and girls, sexism, and the oppression of women, which is to some degree
condoned by society.
Also, there is a rather high level of tolerance toward violence, particularly
toward violence against women. Some people also laud violence as an effective
means of control. Others embrace violence to gain peer acceptance.
Finally, pornography, popular romance novels and music videos give people
unrealistic and often unacceptable expectations of their partners.
Drug and alcohol use and sources of stress (e.g. difficulties in school or at
home, financial difficulties) do not cause violence; they are used as excuses.
THE EFFECTS OF VIOLENCE
The
effects of conjugal violence on women are physically and psychologically
painful. Abuse may lead to health problems, from slight bruises to serious
injuries or fractures, and even death.
It also has serious effects on mental health: social isolation, depression, drug
and alcohol abuse and attempted suicide are all results of conjugal violence. A
study conducted on 225 people who had attempted suicide revealed that 83 percent
of them were abused women. Finally, this type of violence can lead women to take
their frustrations and anger out on their children.
The aggressor is a prisoner of a means of expressing his feelings that makes him
feel increasingly contemptible and guilty and increasingly unable to experience
a satisfying relationship with his partner. He is drawn into a form of
compulsive behavior to which he sees no alternative, for which he might be
arrested and condemned, and lose his wife, children and place in society.
As witnesses to conjugal violence, children are vulnerable at every stage of
their development. In the short and medium terms, the danger is twofold: their
emotional stability and physical health are jeopardized by the violent episodes
and tense atmosphere at home. This results in learning and socialization
difficulties, violent behavior with peers
and the appearance of psychosomatic complaints. [ .. 1 In the long term, in order to survive emotionally, these
children develop a high level of tolerance for violence. They begin to accept
these behaviors as "normal means of expression " and will duplicate
them in their future relationships.(4)
Dating violence among adolescents has more or less the same consequences as
conjugal violence. Adolescents grow up to be adults and repeat the same
behaviors acquired and deemed acceptable within their social group. Neither the
victim nor the aggressor feels at ease in a violent dating relationship.
As teachers, on one among us wants to see adolescents we know today featured in
the headlines a few years from now as victims or perpetrators of conjugal
violence.
4 Fédération
des ressources d'hébergement pour femmes violentées et en difficulté au
Quebec, La violence enfante la violence-Guide de sensibilisation à /a violence conjugale
(Longueuil: n.p., 1992), p.
12-13. (Translator's note: This
citation is a free translation.)
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Dating Violence Bibliography
Not The Way To Love: Violence Against Young Women in Dating Relationships.
(1992) DeAnne Fitzpatrick and Catherine Halliday. Cumberland County Transition
House Association. Amherst, NS.
Sexual Coercion in Dating Relationships. (1996) E. Sandra Byers and
Lucia F. O'Sullivan. New York, London: Hayworth Press.
Violence and Its Impact on Youth and Youth Sexuality: Implications for
Program and Services. (1995) Mental Health Unit and Sexual and Reproductive
Health, Health Canada.
Preventing Dating Violence: Making Waves. Premier Issue, Winter 1998. 2
copies.
Making Waves '97: A Student Manual on Dating Violence. (1997)
Dating Violence. (1990). Gordon F. Phaneuf. National Clearinghouse on Family
Violence, Family Violence Prevention Division, Health and Welfare Canada.
Dating Violence. (1993). Gordon F. Phaneuf. National Clearinghouse on Family
Violence, Family Violence Prevention Division, Health and Welfare Canada.
La violence dans les fréquentations. (1995). Katharine Kelly. Centre
national d'information sur la violence dans la famille, Division de la prévention
de la violence familiale, Santé Canada.
I Don't Understand: Teen Help for Dating and Family Violence. (1988) Lisa
Lough, Annette Rose, Judy Nelson, and Joanne Hollar.
Short Lists, Facts and Definitions.
Love Without Violence. The Coalition Against Abuse in Relationships.
Stop!: Dating Violence Among Adolescents: Classroom Activities. (1995)
Francine Lavoie, Lucie Vezina, Annie Gosseline, and Line Robitaille, in
cooperation with the Groupe de recherche sur l'appropriation psychosociale,
Universite Laval. Ministry of Education, Government of Quebec.
VIRAJ (Programme de prévention de la violence dans les relations amoureuses
des jeunes: Animation en classe. (1995) Francine Lavoie, Lucie Vezina, Annie
Gosseline, and Line Robitaille, en collaboration avec la Groupe de recherche sur
l'appropriation psychosociale, Université Laval. Ministère de l'Éducation,
Gouvernement du Québec.
VIRAJ (Programme de prévention de la violence dans les relations amoureuses
des jeunes: Session de perfectionnement du personnel scolaire. (1995) Francine
Lavoie, Lucie Vezina, Annie Gosseline, and Line Robitaille, en collaboration
avec la Groupe de recherche sur l'appropriation psychosociale, Universite Laval.
Ministère de l'Éducation, Gouvernement du Québec.
Dating Violence poster. Public Legal Education and Information Service of New
Brunswick and Fredericton Sexual Assault Crisis Centre. 3 copies.
Intervention aupres des adolescentes violentées dans les relations intimes:
Projet de memoire-action. (1994) Rina Arsenault, Comit&eacut;e de maitrise,
Programme de maitrise, Ecole de service social, Université de Moncton.
Youth Peer Violence Prevention Project. A peer education training curriculum
on dating violence and healthy relationships. (1998) Avalon Sexual Assault
Centre.
Dating Violence Amongst New Brunswixk Adolescents: A Summary of Two Studies;
Elisa Price, E. Sanders Byers, John Welon, Marielle St. Pierre.
La Violence dans les Fréquentation Chez les Adolescents et Adolescents au
Nouveau Brunswick: Sommaire de deux Études; E. Lisa Price, E Sanders Byers,
John Whelan, Marcelle St. Pierre.
Abuse and Neglect of Adults with Disabilities and Seniors; Public Legal
Education and Information Service of New Brunswick (March 1998)
Violence and People with Disabilities: A Review of The Literature,
L’Institut Rocher Institute for the National Clearinghouse on Family Violence
(1994)
Dating Violence: An issue at any age. Awareness Information for People in the
Workplace. A guide for use by people interested in meeting together to discuss
dating violence issues. Health Canada (March 1996)
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