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Diocese of St. Petersburg Safe Environment Program for Children and Youth

Implementation of the Curriculum within the Schools and Centers of the Diocese of St. Petersburg . Mandated and approved by the United States Conference Catholic BishopsRequired implementation January 2006Approved by Diocese of St. Petersburg Safe Environment Advisory Committee Approved by the Advisory Council for the Schools and Centers of the Diocese.

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Diocese of St. Petersburg Safe Environment Program for Children and Youth

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    1. Diocese of St. Petersburg Safe Environment Program for Children and Youth Curriculum and Instruction Parent Orientation January 2006 Office of Catholic Schools and Centers

    2. Implementation of the Curriculum within the Schools and Centers of the Diocese of St. Petersburg Mandated and approved by the United States Conference Catholic Bishops Required implementation January 2006 Approved by Diocese of St. Petersburg Safe Environment Advisory Committee Approved by the Advisory Council for the Schools and Centers of the Diocese

    3. Components Standards and Benchmarks, Curriculum, and implementation strategies developed by a committee of school/center administrators and teachers Developmentally appropriate instruction at all grade levels

    4. Developmentally Appropriate Curriculum and Instruction Purpose To assist the parent in providing an awareness level for children in Safe Environments What is a safe environment? Who really keeps a child safe? Recognizing unsafe situations Recognizing those who might harm

    5. 2. To provide tools to help children respond to an unsafe environment Avoiding unsafe situations Talking to trusted adults Sharing information, questions and concerns Saying No!

    6. Who will instruct? Responsibility for overseeing the program Collaborative model: Administrators Classroom teachers Religion teachers PE/ Health teachers Guidance Counselors Parents

    7. What will be taught? Standards -Three strands of concentration Cognitive Development Spiritual Development Behavioral Development Pre k through 12 specific benchmarks for instruction *Across the curriculum *Religion class instruction *PE/Health class *Guidance programs

    8. Sample Lessons

    9. First…Taking good care of yourself is a top priority! Good health habits show respect for the gift of life!

    10. PRACTICE GOOD HEALTH HABITS EVERYDAY FOR HEALTHY “PHYSICAL” GROWTH: Take a shower or a bath. Brush your teeth. Comb your hair. Wear deodorant. Wear CLEAN clothes. Exercise Eat a balanced diet.

    11. Practice good habits for healthy “spiritual” growth. Keep a close relationship with God. Make time to pray each day. Attend church on Sunday. Model your faith by having good character and being a good friend. “Love thy neighbor as thy self”

    12. All Relationships Have Boundaries… parent – child Teacher – student husband - wife neighbor to neighbor friend to friend babysitters to child

    13. External Boundaries Be Smart: Protect Your Body Keep your body safe and healthy. You have body parts that are private and personal. You have the right to protect your privacy. No one should touch you where your bathing suit covers, except a doctor. Children have the right to say “No” to adults. Being older doesn’t always mean being wiser. Listen to your conscience What would Jesus do? .

    14. External Boundaries Children should understand age-appropriate relationships. Is a 19 year old teenager starting to hang out with the 12 and 13 year olds in the neighborhood? RED FLAG! Is one of your 11 year old girlfriends talking about dating a 17 year boy? RED FLAG! You should object when someone uses offensive or sexual language in your presence. Someone may be using offensive language to see how you react! Usual offensive language can be part of the “grooming” process – be careful! You should have “personal fences” or boundaries.

    15. Internal Boundaries It’s ok to have feelings and thoughts that you keep to yourself. Your prayer life can be very personal. Other people do not need to know everything about you. Protect the deepest part of who you are – your spirit.

    16. Groomers can be very deceptive They can appear to be very nice people. They will first try to fool you with a pretend friendship. Then they will start to control you, perhaps with fear or threats. Soon you may be keeping secrets. They will wait a long time to get what they want. Then they will use you to get what they want, including sexual favors.

    17. Sample Lesson

    22. Strategies for High School Keep Safe Environment awareness at the forefront of discussion and instruction CCC Department Heads have viewed the PowerPoint on Safe Environment and are charged with providing semester reports on curricular adherence and teachable moment opportunities in each classroom. Those reports are part of a semester audit submitted to the diocese. Encourage students to share concerns Students meet with Guidance Counselors at least once each year and are encouraged to bring issues and concerns at any time. Posters, announcements, programs, gatherings – all are opportunities to remind students to contact Administration, Guidance, or Teachers. Provide a safe campus The Administration has long held the personal, emotional, spiritual, behavioral safety of our students at the forefront of every activity, every class, every forward step.

    23. Share information about the Groomer with students and their parents Students will view the PowerPoint in Health & Physical Education classes. These classes offer the opportunity for small class instruction and discussion. Promote Anti-bullying programs A committee of teachers and staff was, last year, formed to promote RESPECT on campus. One goal is to implement a school wide anti-bullying campaign. The work of this focus group is ongoing and a part of our re-accreditation. Encourage student leadership against bullying This step will be initiated and organized by the RESPECT committee. Utilize age-appropriate materials

    24. Enhance Guidance Programs The Guidance curriculum focus is as follows for each grade level: Freshmen: Unity & Respect, Sophomores: Tolerance & Acceptance, Juniors: Healthy Relationships, Seniors: Decision Making Update Health, Theology, Social Studies Programs Many of the Safe Environment benchmarks are currently well integrated into these areas. Semester audits will document initiated and ongoing efforts. Keep parents involved Consult Naviance for information on Stress/Time/Anger Management, Eating Disorders, Suicide, Cyber Safety, Relationships, Bullying, and more. Additionally, Safe Environment will periodically provide information through K-12, E-Connections, Naviance, and mailings.

    25. FOR OUR PARENTS… Model “safe” behaviors Model and support the Catholic /Christian values taught in the schools Talk to your children Encourage them to share their concerns Encourage their trust in you Encourage their trust in God Know where they are and who they are with Monitor relational interaction among peers

    26. 9. Listen to their music 10. Check history of sites visited on computer/ check instant messaging/email 11. Check text messaging on cell phones 12. Be sure cell phones have emergency numbers programmed (ICE)

    27. 13. Attend Diocesan sponsored Safe Environment training 14. Discuss information shared in class 15. Report suspicious people, potential dangers to appropriate authorities 16. Partner with your school/ center 17. Communicate questions and concerns with the school administrator, guidance counselor, teacher

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