Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Students Feel Safer With Police Presence In Certain Ontario High Schools: Study

The Canadian Press, 10 Jan, 2018 11:44 AM
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — A new study suggests the practice of placing police officers in certain southern Ontario high schools made students feel safer while building good relationships with law enforcement.
     
     
    The study from Carleton University examined the School Resource Officer program at high schools in Peel Region — which is made up of three municipalities west of Toronto — from 2014 to 2017 to determine the value of having officers in the schools.
     
     
    Researchers surveyed nearly 1,300 Grade 9 students at five Peel schools and conducted interviews with school resource officers, school administrators and community members.
     
     
    The study says students reported being less fearful in school and in the community since the program began, and schools reported fewer incidents of crime and bullying.
     
     
    It also found that having officers in schools helps de-escalate difficult situations and keeps students out of the criminal justice system where appropriate.
     
     
    The Toronto District School Board cancelled its own School Resource Officer program in November after a report by board staff found many racialized students felt harassed, targeted and unsafe when police were in their schools.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary Man Who Strangled Wife So She'd Stop Talking Gets Life With No Parole For 10 Years

    Calgary Man Who Strangled Wife So She'd Stop Talking Gets Life With No Parole For 10 Years
    Shannon Madill's Body Was Found Buried In The Backyard Of Her Home Months After She Disappeared In 2014

    Calgary Man Who Strangled Wife So She'd Stop Talking Gets Life With No Parole For 10 Years

    BC Liberal Leadership Hopefuls On The Defence Debating Plans For Party's Future

    BC Liberal Leadership Hopefuls On The Defence Debating Plans For Party's Future
    Todd Stone and Andrew Wilkinson called out former Surrey mayor Dianne Watts for not having released a platform in the campaign that is set to wrap up in two months.

    BC Liberal Leadership Hopefuls On The Defence Debating Plans For Party's Future

    Wrongful Conviction Award For British Columbia Man Capped At $8 Million

    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Court of Appeal says the provincial government will not have to pay the full $8 million in compensation awarded to a man who spent 27 years in prison before he was acquitted of sexual assault.

    Wrongful Conviction Award For British Columbia Man Capped At $8 Million

    Greater Vancouver Home Sales Climbed In November Compared With A Year Earlier

    Greater Vancouver Home Sales Climbed In November Compared With A Year Earlier
    Residential home sales in Greater Vancouver jumped by about 26 per cent in November compared with the same month a year ago.

    Greater Vancouver Home Sales Climbed In November Compared With A Year Earlier

    B.C.'s Chief Coroner Denounces 'Fear-based' Fentanyl Campaign By Funeral Home

    B.C.'s Chief Coroner Denounces 'Fear-based' Fentanyl Campaign By Funeral Home
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's chief coroner says the agency doesn't endorse what it calls "fear-based initiatives" after a funeral home launched a campaign to combat the opioid overdose crisis.

    B.C.'s Chief Coroner Denounces 'Fear-based' Fentanyl Campaign By Funeral Home

    Bollywood Stars Shine In Mukesh Ambani's Party For London Mayor Sadiq Khan

    Bollywood Stars Shine In Mukesh Ambani's Party For London Mayor Sadiq Khan
    Khan was the guest of honour at a party hosted by the Ambanis. The guest list read like a who's who of Mumbai - and some of the most exalted whos of Maximum City belong to Bollywood

    Bollywood Stars Shine In Mukesh Ambani's Party For London Mayor Sadiq Khan