Thursday, April 10, 2008

Top 5 Safety Considerations When Choosing a College

From Security on Campus:



National Campus Safety Organization Releases Top 5 Safety Considerations When Choosing a College or University

Issues Critical to One of Largest Decisions Facing Families

King of Prussia, Penn.-Security On Campus, Inc. (SOC), a national non-profit, grassroots organization devoted to safe campus communities for college and university students, today released 5 tips high school seniors and their parents should consider during their college selection process. These recommendations come as many families are making their final college choices and coincides with September’s National Campus Safety Awareness Month (NCSAM).

“With approximately 45,000 serious crimes on U.S. campuses each year, safety is an important factor which students and parents need to address,” says Catherine Bath, Executive Director of SOC. “Our five criteria are based on two decades’ worth of experience in advocating for safer campuses and crime victims’ rights. They provide a powerful framework that families can use to help evaluate a school’s dedication to the safety of their student body.”

Security On Campus, Inc.’s Top 5 Safety Tips for choosing a college or university are:

  1. Monitor available crime information
    Under the federal Jeanne Clery Act, colleges are required to disclose both crime statistics and timely information regarding campus crime. Schools are also required to disclose key security policies such as whether the campus is protected by police officers, security guards, or a trained student patrol.
  2. Choose schools willing to embrace innovative technological solutions
    Electronic key-card systems and video surveillance in public areas can cut down on criminal activity. More recent technologies, like those from Rave Wireless, which transform students’ mobile phones into personal alarm devices, are also poised to reduce crime on campus.
  3. Favor schools that administer strict alcohol and other drug abuse policies
    Most campus violence is alcohol or other drug related, and 1,700 college students die annually from alcohol related causes. Dry campuses and those which offer substance-free housing experience fewer problems.
  4. Consider the institution’s history of advocacy for victims of sexual assault and other violent crimes
    As many as one quarter of undergraduate women will be the victim of a completed or attempted sexual assault, and most on-campus crimes will be committed by a fellow student or acquaintance. Creating a support system fosters campus-wide attention to the problems at hand, and can help deter future crimes.
  5. Demand effective parent-notification policies
    When students get into serious trouble with alcohol or other drug abuse, failing grades, suicide attempts, or perpetrating violence, their parents or guardians deserve to be notified.

These guidelines, as well as a complete campus safety audit, may be downloaded from the SOC web site. For more information please visit http://www.securityoncampus.org/ or http://www.campussafetymonth.org/.

About Security On Campus, Inc.

Security On Campus, Inc. is a non-profit (501(c)(3)) organization whose mission is to prevent violence, substance abuse and other crimes in college and university campus communities across the United States, and to compassionately assist the victims of these crimes. SOC was founded in October 1987 by Connie and Howard Clery after the brutal on-campus rape and murder of their daughter Jeanne, a freshman at Pennsylvania’s Lehigh University.

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