Indicator: 7 - Youth Feeling Safe To/From School

Why This Is Important
Schools are an important environment for young people, and the
safety of that environment is of great concern to educators, young
people and their families. Schools are also a reflection of their
local communities, and indicators related to school safety can also
be indications of how safe children are in their community. How
safe young people feel on their way to or from school is significant
in that it is a measure of the safety of the local community environment.

Where We Stand
Since 1993, over 90% of young people in grades 9 through 12 have
reported feeling safe at school, or traveling to or from school.
However, it appears this percentage has slipped slightly in recent
years, both in Maine and nationally. The 2001 survey data indicates
that about 1 in 10 young people in Maine stayed away from school
at least one day in the last 30 because they felt unsafe.
Data Sources and Context
The results are the percentage of young people in grades 9 through
12 who did not stay away from school on at least one of the past
30 days because they felt unsafe at school or on their way to or
from school. This information comes from the Maine Youth Risk Behavior
Survey (YRBS), Maine Department of Education. The data source is
the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System maintained by the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Data from the
Maine YRBS is available on-line at http://www.mainecshp.com/survey.html.
National YRBS figures can be found at http://www.cdc.gov/needphp/yrbs/indext.htm.
*Important Note: YRBS data is gathered every two years using a
questionnaire administered to a sample of students in Maine and
nationally. When the Maine YRBS survey has an overall response rate
of 60% or higher, the CDC statistically weights the results so that
the numbers can be generalized to all public school students in
the state in grades 9-12. When the overall response rate is below
60%, the CDC does not perform such statistical weighting, and the
data apply only to the students who actually filled out the questionnaires.
Maine's YRBS data for 1993 and 1999 was unweighted, so information
from those years cannot be compared reliably with data from 1995,
1997 and 2001.
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