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The primary target audience for these guidelines is the school
administrator responsible for overall school or district policies
or responsible for one or more components of school health and safety
at the school site or district level. Undoubtedly, many others who
play a role in the assessment, planning, or improvement of school
health and safety programs or in advocacy efforts related to school
health and safety programs will also find these guidelines helpful.
These include school health professionals, educators, school board
members, parents, other community members (including transportation
officials and child advocates), legislators at all levels, professionals
in government departments (e.g., education, health, safety, transportation,
justice, and labor), and students themselves. |
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Many schools and districts have practices and policies in place
that are consistent with guidelines recommended in this collection.
Most schools will find many of the remaining guidelines easy to
adopt. For some guidelines, however, a school or district might
not find the guidelines feasible in the short-term, given resource
limitations, but will include them in their planning. |
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Often, documents designed as recommendations are misused as standards
or measures of basic quality, particularly when no other written
standards exist. Some guidelines represent minimum standards for
safety and health while others represent the optimum. Each community,
with the help of its own health, safety, mental health, and educational
experts and community members, can and should decide which guidelines
are basic, which do not apply, and which to work toward. This collection
of guidelines can help community and school leaders determine the
breadth of school health, mental health, and safety issues and set
priorities for future actions. The Health, Mental Health and
Safety Guidelines should not be used as a tool for punitive
measures or legal threats. |
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This compendium of guidelines draws upon other published guidelines
on specific components of school health and safety programs as well
as on overall coordination of these programs. It provides references
to these other sources, most of which provide more description and
detail than are included in this document. Interested readers should
refer to the referenced guidelines and standards for additional
information and details.
It is hoped that these guidelines will stimulate and invigorate
discussions of methods that schools and districts can use to operationalize
health and safety objectives outlined here. It is not unreasonable
to expect that this compendium will inspire further publications
that describe model programs, provide technical assistance, and
uncover best practices so that schools and school districts can
attain the intended purpose of each guideline. |
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