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School Threat Assessment and Restorative Practices: Connections to Improve School Safety
School Threat Assessment and Restorative Practices: Connections to Improve School Safety
Date: January 24, 2025
Time: 9:00am - 3:30pm
Place: MLG 110, University of Washington Tacoma
Details
This in-person event will serve as a training for practitioners doing work in schools such as threat assessment, school safety, and restorative practices. It will feature leading experts and practitioners and feature real-world case studies as well as emergent research and approaches to better integrate practices of threat assessment and restorative justice.
It will also be open to the entire UW community and the larger public. This event is free for attendees. Morning refreshments and a light lunch will be provided.
Featuring:
- John Van Dreal, school psychologist with over 35 years of experience in threat assessment and management, behavioral intervention, and school security
- Courtenay McCarthy, lead school psychologist in student preventive behavioral threat assessment and management for Salem-Keizer Public Schools
- Kirsten Rue, Superintendent of the Griffin School District in the South Puget Sound
- Kimberly Tennant, Assistant Principal of North Thurston High School
- Dr. Eric Madfis, Professor and Director of the Violence Prevention and Transformation Research Collaborative in the School of Social Work and Criminal Justice at the University of Washington Tacoma
Featured Speakers
John Van Dreal
John Van Dreal is a school psychologist with over 35 years of experience in threat assessment and management, behavioral intervention, and school security. In 1999, he began the development of the Salem-Keizer Model, a multi-agency student threat assessment system considered by experts to be a leading practice. He is the principal author of the book Assessing Student Threats: Implementing The Salem-Keizer System, Second Edition and a co-author of Preventing Youth Violence: The Pathway Back through Inclusion and Connection (authored with Courtenay McCarthy and Coleen Van Dreal). He regularly provides training and consultation to audiences nationally on preventive behavioral threat assessment.
Courtenay McCarthy
Courtenay McCarthy is the lead school psychologist in student preventive behavioral threat assessment and management for Salem-Keizer Public Schools. She is also chair of the Mid-Valley Student Threat Assessment Team and is a member of the Marion County Threat Advisory Team. While partnering with John Van Dreal, she has refined the Salem-Keizer student threat assessment system to reflect leading practice in behavioral threat assessment, violence prevention, early intervention, and equitable practices. Courtenay has over two decades of experience in prevention, threat assessment and management, psychoeducational evaluation, intervention with at-risk youth and families, and behavioral consultation and intervention. As a certified threat manager and nationally certified school psychologist, she regularly provides training and consultation on student threat assessment systems implementation and youth violence to school districts and community agencies throughout the nation. She also provides workshops, symposiums, and content presentations to national audiences. In addition, Courtenay is a contributing author to the book, Assessing Student Threats: Implementing the Salem-Keizer System – Second Edition (Van Dreal, et al. 2017) and a co-author on the book, Preventing Youth Violence: The Pathway Back through Inclusion and Connection (released in March of 2022).
Kirsten Rue
Kirsten Rue is the superintendent of the Griffin School District in the South Puget Sound. She previously served as the Director of Student Achievement for the North Thurston Public Schools, where she led a district-wide initiative focused on Restorative Practices that included the implementation of Restorative Justice Centers at all four of the district’s high schools. She has trained adults and students of all ages to become practitioners of restorative practices. As part of her role as the Director of Student Achievement, she also oversaw the district’s threat assessment processes. Out of an interest in exploring the intersection between threat assessment and restorative practices, Ms. Rue has worked with school leaders to approach threat assessment as an inclusionary process. She is committed to creating caring school climates based on respect, responsibility, and repair of harm.
Kimberly Tennant
Kimberly Tennant is an Assistant Principal at North Thurston High School in the North Thurston Public Schools. She is in her 30th year as an educator and has served as a teacher for 22 years, an instructional coach for 5 and currently as an assistant principal. North Thurston High School has implemented Restorative Practices that have shown a decrease in major disciplinary issues for the school.
Dr. Eric Madfis
Dr. Eric Madfis is Professor and Director of the Violence Prevention and Transformation Research Collaborative in the School of Social Work and Criminal Justice at the University of Washington Tacoma. His research on the causes and prevention of school violence and mass shootings has been published in academic journals across a range of disciplines and featured in national and international media outlets. Dr. Madfis has spoken to audiences across the country and around the world about his scholarship, including to the United States Congress and the Washington State Legislature. His books include How to Stop School Rampage Killing: Lessons from Averted Mass Shootings and Bombings and All-American Massacre: The Tragic Role of American Culture and Society in Mass Shootings.