3851487 Security - Safety Presentation.ppt

ismailsultanqureshi 5 views 20 slides Sep 03, 2024
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About This Presentation

3851487 Security - Safety Presentation.ppt


Slide Content

Aggression in Higher Education
Presented by Carsbia Anderson
and
Lara Shipley

Aggressive Behavior
•Aggressive Behavior is not merely assertive behavior.
•Aggression seeks to harm others and occurs frequently in
higher education.
Dealing with roommate conflicts
Policy enforcement, threatening behavior in hearings
Encountering drunk or substance abusing students
Managing psychological disturbances and disruptions
Dating relationship arguments/fights
Vandalism and robbery
Parking and food service complaints

Aggression Continuum
•With both Cognitive and Primal Aggressors,
we must be aware of how they move through
the aggression continuum.
•This Aggression Continuum is made up of the:
Trigger Phase
Escalation Phase
Crisis Phase

Aggression Continuum
Trigger Phase ( Heart Rate 60-80, normal)
Calm, normal breathing
An activating event occurs
Begin to experience stress and anxiety
Circumstances are dynamic but everyone is coping
Offers a baseline
Begins escalating….

Aggression Continuum
 Escalation Phase (Heart Rate 115-145)
As anxiety mounts..
Quality of judgment diminishes
Swearing, arguing with others
Fewer arm and hand gestures
Diminished creativity in thought
Reduced thoughtful consideration

Aggression Continuum
 Crisis Phase (Heart Rate 145-175)
Hardens point of view
Issues ultimatum
Growling, baring teeth
Direct, prolonged eye contact
Moving in and out of your personal space
Eyes targeting body parts to strike

Aggression Continuum
 Crisis Phase (Heart Rate Above 175)
Loss of verbal control
Loss of judgment
Begins physical attack

Aggressive Behavior Types
Some forms of aggressive behavior are less overt. To
identify these other forms of aggressive behavior, John
Byrnes has developed the concept of the Un-
magnificent Seven.
These seven clusters of behavior are commonly
experienced personality types which seek to negatively
impact a community – whether it be an office staff,
residence hall, classroom or department.

Aggressive Behavior Types
•Not all behavior you encounter will be overt
aggression.
•Most will be cognitive (intent-driven) aggression.
•Many individuals develop frustrating behavior
patterns that create chaos and disrupt a sense of
community
•We will now discuss seven common patterns of
frustrating passive-aggressive behavior. They are
the Un-Magnificent Seven.

Aggressive Behavior Types
•The Sherman Tank
- This person enjoys confrontation and always
needs to prove themselves right
- They will argue about rules on your floor, office,
department
- Push past weaker personalities
- They seek to dominate
- Challenge your authority

Aggressive Behavior Types
•The Sniper
–This individual will be critical of you behind your back
–They will gossip and create chaos when you are not
around
–They will blend in to their surroundings when
threatened or challenged
–They will use jokes or sarcasm to cover their true
motives

Aggressive Behavior Types
•The Exploder
–This individual will have wide mood swings
–Will be a “loud mouth” and will make
insulting and cutting remarks
–They want everyone to silence those who
disagree with them and are happiest when
others are passive

Aggressive Behavior Types
•The Complainer
–Whines and complains about the situations they
are in or the school rules
–Never seems happy or optimistic about
improvement
–Wears down and drains those around them
–Feels unappreciated and powerless

Aggressive Behavior Types
•The Negativist
–These individuals are never happy and desire
others around them to be just as gloomy
–Rarely see the bright side to things
–Say “no” to everything they are asked
–Depress other people around them

Aggressive Behavior Types
•The Clam
–These individuals are disengaged, silent and
unresponsive
–They may be upset or frustrated, but never
communicate it

Aggressive Behavior Types
•The Bulldozer
–These individuals overwhelm others
with facts and figures
–They only value their opinion and have
little regard for the knowledge or
viewpoints of others

Aggression Management
Aggression Management’s Universal Approach
1.Start with getting the aggressor away from the
crowd.
2.Begin your interaction with a positive statement
not a negative one (constructive, not punitive).
3.Explain to them the documented issues in a
neutral and reflective way (without sarcasm).

Aggression Management
Aggression Management’s Universal Approach
4.Explain that their present behavior is not in
their best interest.
5.Ask how we can work together to become
more productive.

Aggressive Behavior Documentation
•It is important to document the behavior you
observe in the Advocate system.
•Ask yourself
–Are there witness statements I should gather?
–Is there evidence I should save?
–Are my notes clear and legible?
–Will my statement withstand a cross-examination?
–Did I create my statement immediately after
event?

Aggression in Higher Education
•Brian Van Brunt, Ed.D, Certified Senior Trainer
–Phone: 603-491-3215
–Email: [email protected]
•John D. Byrnes, President, Center for Aggression
Management
–Phone: 407-718-5637
–Email:
[email protected]
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