THEATRE.IN.EDUCATION
Target Audience
Our Target audience is school students aged from 15-16 for our TIE Project. Our initial ideas where to do a performance based on making decisions and rasing issues to do with domestic violence and sexual abuse. The teachers explained to my group how we should try steer away from the stereotypical issues that have been performed in schools such as, gun and knife crime, gangs etc. because they have been done frequently in schools and education institutions so we started to think of other occuring issues that are not raised to secondary school students enough. although topics like gangs and gun/knife crime are serious issues that people need to be aware of. we feel that its been focused on too much whereas there are issues more affecting students everyday life such as domestic violence and sexual abuse. I believe my group brought together some good research and statistics underlining key issues that happens in school, which we thought we should include for example,
sexting and social networking. Because technology has grown considerably, it is now easier for peers, friends and family to be more connected through the internet and social networking services. although this is a reletively not a issue. there are some problems that can occur when using these sites (espcially for hormonal teenagers who use these social network mediums religously). Sexting has increasingly become a issues thats affecting young peoples lives. Social networks such as BBM has become prevelant in this area for these things to occur. young people sending pictures around to eachother that include sexually explicit material has become rife. Even myself alone has been a witness of constantly being sent explicit images of young people, which have been shared around to the masses like wildfire. these issues are a threat to young peoples lives leaving them to feel vunerable and suffer from depression based on these things. Because of this we included this topic in our performance piece.
I believe these topics and issues would meet the current needs of secondary school students because these issues arise in everyday life, particularly as a teenager. We are trying to give a message to the students that the decisions they make can affect there lives so we are trying to make them more aware of how they can deal with situations and issues stated. we give them advice on who they can speak to in order to prevent further problems for occuring. This would give the student more confidence to try and deal with there issues the right way instead of it spiralling out of their control.
Statistics and reasearch on Sexual Abuse and Domestic Violence
sexual abuse
January 2013
·
Nearly a quarter
of young adults experienced sexual abuse during childhood.
·
17,727 sexual
crimes against children under 16 were recorded in England and Wales in 2010/11.
Research
statistics on the prevalence of child sexual abuse
Child abuse and neglect in the UK today (Radford et al, 2011) is a major piece of NSPCC research which interviewed 1,761 young adults aged 18-24 years; 2,275 children aged 11-17 years and 2,160 parents of children aged under 11.
Below are the key findings on child sexual abuse.
Experience of some form of sexual abuse (see Table 5.2)
·
Nearly a quarter
of young adults (24.1%) experienced sexual abuse (including contact and
non-contact), by an adult or by a peer during childhood.
·
One in six
children aged 11-17 (16.5%) have experienced sexual abuse.
·
Almost one in 10
children aged 11-17 (9.4%) have experienced sexual abuse in the past year.
Teenage girls aged between 15 and 17 years reported the highest past year rates
of sexual abuse.
Experience of contact sexual abuse (see Table 5.2)
·
One in nine
young adults (11.3%) experienced contact sexual abuse during childhood.
·
One in 20
children aged 11-17 (4.8%) have experienced contact sexual abuse.
·
Two thirds
(65.9%) of contact sexual abuse experienced by children aged 0-17 was
perpetrated by someone aged under 18.
Disclosing sexual abuse (see page 9)
·
More than one in
three children aged 11-17 (34%) who experienced contact sexual abuse by an
adult did not tell anyone else about it.
·
Four out of five
children aged 11-17 (82.7%) who experienced contact sexual abuse from a peer
did not tell anyone else about it.
Domestic abuse
In a study of 139 serious case reviews in England 2009-2011, 63% of cases were found to have domestic abuse as a risk factor. From: Brandon, Marian, Sidebotham, Peter, Bailey, Sue and Belderson, Pippa, Hawley, Carol, Ellis, Catherine and Megson, Matthew (2012) New learning from serious case reviews: a two year report for 2009-2011 (PDF). London: Department for Education.
In a study of 56 significant case reviews in Scotland since 2007, 30 (54%) of cases were found to have domestic abuse as a risk factor.
From: Vincent, S. and Petch, A (2012) Audit and analysis of initial and significant case reviews (PDF). Edinburgh: The Scottish Government.
According to a recent NSPCC study, 12% of under 11s, 18% of 11-17s and 24% of 18-24s had been exposed to domestic abuse between adults in their homes during childhood. Adult males were the perpetrators in 94% of cases where one parent had physically abused another. From: NSPCC (2011) Child abuse and neglect in the UK today. London: NSPCC.
Domestic abuse
accounts for 18% of all violent crime.
From: Home Office (2011) Crime in
England and Wales 2010/11. London: Home
Office.
Children who experience severe maltreatment by a parent or guardian are between 2.7 and 2.9 times more likely to also have witnessed family violence. Under 11s who had experienced physical abuse by a parent or guardian were almost 5 times more likely to have witnessed family violence.
From: NSPCC (2011) Child abuse and neglect in the UK today. London: NSPCC.
Between 1994 and 2004, 29 children in 13 families were killed during contact (or in one case residence) arrangements in England and Wales. Ten of these children were killed in the last two years. From: Saunders, H. (2004) 29 child homicides: lessons still to be learnt on domestic violence and child protection. Bristol: Women’s Aid Federation of England (WAFE).
The total cost of domestic abuse to services (the criminal justice system, health, social services, housing and civil legal) amounts to £3.8 billion per year, while the loss to the economy is £1.9 billion per year in England and Wales. An additional element is the human and emotional cost which is not counted in the cost of services. This amounts to just under £10 billion a year. Including all costs, the total cost of domestic abuse for the state, employers and victims is estimated at around £16 billion per year.
From: Walby, S. (2009) The cost of domestic violence: update 2009 (Word). Lancaster University: UNESCO Chair in Gender Research.
Children who experience severe maltreatment by a parent or guardian are between 2.7 and 2.9 times more likely to also have witnessed family violence. Under 11s who had experienced physical abuse by a parent or guardian were almost 5 times more likely to have witnessed family violence.
From: NSPCC (2011) Child abuse and neglect in the UK today. London: NSPCC.
Between 1994 and 2004, 29 children in 13 families were killed during contact (or in one case residence) arrangements in England and Wales. Ten of these children were killed in the last two years. From: Saunders, H. (2004) 29 child homicides: lessons still to be learnt on domestic violence and child protection. Bristol: Women’s Aid Federation of England (WAFE).
The total cost of domestic abuse to services (the criminal justice system, health, social services, housing and civil legal) amounts to £3.8 billion per year, while the loss to the economy is £1.9 billion per year in England and Wales. An additional element is the human and emotional cost which is not counted in the cost of services. This amounts to just under £10 billion a year. Including all costs, the total cost of domestic abuse for the state, employers and victims is estimated at around £16 billion per year.
From: Walby, S. (2009) The cost of domestic violence: update 2009 (Word). Lancaster University: UNESCO Chair in Gender Research.
No comments:
Post a Comment