Learning Opportunities

This session has been completed.

Violence Threat Risk Assessment (VTRA) Level 1

Presented By

Bonnie Randall

Series Sessions

Date Time
May 01, 20249:00 am to 4:00 pm
May 02, 20249:00 am to 4:00 pm

Location

Edmonton (Fantasyland Hotel)
17700 - 87 Avenue
Google Map

Grade Levels

All, Other

Level 1 VTRA - Theory and Practice

The primary purpose of this two day training is to teach school administrators, counsellors, police officers, and other related partners (community mental health, social services, probation, etc.) the multidisciplinary process of determining if a threat maker actually poses a risk to a target or targets they have threatened.

The primary purpose of this two day training is to teach school administrators, counsellors, police officers, and other related partners (community mental health, social services, probation, etc.) the multidisciplinary process of determining if a threat maker actually poses a risk to a target or targets they have threatened. Teams also assess students who already have histories of violence and are concerned about further and/or more serious violence potential. Serious violence is an evolutionary process and most students leave (intentionally or unintentially) signs and indicators. Teams are trained to become local experts at collecting data that helps to paint a clear picture of how high risk a student may be to carry out an act of violence towards themselves or others and what the appropriatew intervention should be based on that data. Teams are also trained to address the newer issue of “unauthored threats” that have plagued schools across Canada for the past few years. The level I training is best implemented when the local school districts (divisions) across the country take the lead to organize their partners to be trained together. From the schools and school districts there should be principals and vice-principals, counsellors, social workers, psychologists, and others represented from every school as well as district level personnel including the superintendent(s) and director(s). From our community partners there should be representatives from police, mental health, child protection (social services), youth robation, local hospital staff who conduct emergency violence and suicide risk assessments, and others as determined by the unique characteristics of your communities.

Level One VTRA Training Outline

DAY ONE 

  • Introduction
  • Training Overview
  • Traumatic Event Systems (TES) Model Crisis vs. Traumatic Events Ground Zero and Impact Zones
    • Traumatic Aftermath and High Risk Student Behavior
    • Critical Periods
    • Targeted vs. Non-Targeted Violence
    • Human Target Selection
    • Site Selection
  • Unidimensional Assessments
  • Safe Schools Initiative: U.S. Secret Service and U.S. Department of Education
  • FBI:  Four-Pronged Assessment Model
  • High Risk Students:Traditional vs. Non-Traditional Fluidity between Homicidal and Suicidal Domains
    • Threat Makers in the Aftermath
    • Identification with the Aggressor
    • Girl Violence
  • Responding to threats in the aftermath: The effects of Over-reacting and Under-reacting.

DAY TWO

  • School Dynamics
  • Multidisciplinary Violence Threat/Risk Assessment Teams: Acts of Legislation and Legal Issues
  • Threat/Risk Assessment Process
    • Stage I Assessment
    • Stage II Assessment
    • Stage III Implementation
  • Assessing Violence Potential: Protocol for Dealing with High Risk Student Behavior (Ninth Edition)
  • Case Studies

Target Audience

School Administrators, Law Enforcement Officers, Social Workers, Youth Workers

Also Recommended For

Educators, Front Line Workers, Classroom Teacher and Support personell

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