An innovative afterschool program in three Kansas City,
Kansas neighborhoods is one of the early "success
stories" for the CML's Beyond Blame: Challenging Violence
in the Media.
Using a peer counseling model, high school seniors and college
students were trained by consultants from University of
Missouri/Kansas City to conduct the eight sessions of the
Beyond Blame Middle School curriculum with groups of
younger students. The three afterschool sites included a
Boys and Girls club in central Kansas City, a Catholic
parish in a blue collar community and a youth center
serving high-risk young people from foster care homes. A
total of 75 youngsters attended the three
groups.
One of the most positive results, according to Whitney Vanderwerff, PhD,
director of the National Alliance for Nonviolent
Programming, a national grassroots agency that initiated
the local planning leading to the pilot program, is that
the kids kept coming back week after week.
Attendance is one of the great challenges of voluntary afterschool
programs, she explained, crediting the high attendance
rate with the fact that Beyond Blame is video based and
that the program deals with real world issues the kids
are facing everyday. 90% of the participants personally
knew someone who had been killed or was seriously hurt by
an act of violence.
A basic pre- and post-test evaluation also provided some notable results
according to LeeAnn Smith, local coordinator of the
Kansas City coalition which sponsors the program with
funding from the Ewing Marion Kauffmann
Foundation,
"I've learned more how to control my anger...and also that you can solve your problems other than just beating on somebody and shooting them."
–Anthony Green, Age 13
Before starting the program, 17% of the youngsters thought that violence
was a "good way" to solve problems. Following the 8 weeks
of discussing and analyzing the video clips and group
activities, only 6.9% agreed with the statement.
Thirteen-year-old Anthony Green noted he had "learned to
separate TV violence from regular violence and to know
not to handle my decisions like they do on TV."
The Beyond Blame curriculum includes a wealth of "kid-friendly" concepts,
says Smith, including jolts per minute i.e., any
bang-bang-bang sequence that captures the audience's
nonstop attention in action programming. Once they grasp
such concepts, she explains, they can better understand
how media programming is crafted to use violence to
attract viewers and keep them watching.
Alternatives to violent entertainment are also explored. One activity
challenges kids to come up with a cast, plot and setting
for a movie that would attract large crowds and be
profitable but not include any violence. The result from
25 boys in inner city Kansas City? A movie about
basketball and romance, featuring Shaquille O'Neal, Halle
Berry, Martin Lawrence and Will Smith.
Through discussion the participants also began to question why
they often laughed in response to screen violence. Beyond
Blame gets young people to start thinking about the
violence and how it affects them and what they can do
about it so that they are not as desensitized to violence
and are not as fearful, Ms. Smith said, She notes that as
the older teens worked with the younger ones, they, too
began to be more vigilant about the violent images they
were exposed to on TV and in movies.
The Kansas City Alliance was so pleased with the three pilot groups that
the project expanded to 10 additional sites.
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