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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
14 pages in length. Virginia Tech was yet another rude awakening to a social ill that has only increased in intensity since the first wake-up call at Kent State in the 1970s. The shockwave that spread through the entire industry of academia was such that college administrators feared they had no viable formula for staving off future attacks, ultimately placing every student and faculty member directly in harm's way. Myriad scenarios have played out in the minds of those who found fault with how several systems failed at the same time in order for such a tremendous breach of security to occur. The writer discusses the trend of college campus violence, causes and prevention programs. Bibliography lists 17 sources.
Page Count:
14 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCguncollg.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
heretofore untouchable population and spawned a new and alarming perspective upon violent behavior. The extent to which college campuses are now faced with the dual task of preventing brutal
attacks while at the same time addressing the issue of violence from its core is both grand and far-reaching; that students are committing acts of unspeakable brutality upon their classmates
and instructors speaks to a tremendous breakdown in social and cultural principles. Institutions of higher education already have chosen policies either banning or tightly controlling guns on campus.
That is as it should be. These institutions are responsible for the safety of their campuses and must continue to have the right to control firearms. After the
massacre at Virginia Tech, we should make it harder, not easier, for dangerous people to get guns, and harder to acquire the high-capacity firepower wielded by the Virginia Tech shooter
(Helmke, 2008). II. OVERVIEW/HISTORY Virginia Tech was yet another rude awakening to a social ill that has only increased in intensity since
the first wake-up call at Kent State in the 1970s (Jenson, 2007; Smith, 2007). The shockwave that spread through the entire industry of academia was such that college administrators
feared they had no viable formula for staving off future attacks, ultimately placing every student and faculty member directly in harms way. Myriad scenarios have played out in the
minds of those who found fault with how several systems failed at the same time in order for such a tremendous breach of security to occur. Rittenhouse (2007) points
to those who cited various policy and law enforcement procedures that failed to stand up to the challenge of deterring campus violence involving firearms. Of these, three in particular
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