Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-2021
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Source Publication
Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology
Source ISSN
1078-1919
Original Item ID
DOI: 10.1037/pac0000534
Abstract
For the last 20 years, gun violence has severely compromised safety, learning outcomes, social development, and psychological well-being in many high school communities. An emerging body of international research describes strategies developed to support students and staff members in the wake of school shootings. However, these protocols are typically designed to help administrators manage the immediate sequelae of these incidents, leaving survivors to handle the lasting consequences of their experiences on their own. This article presents a broad framework for facilitating long-term psychological growth that can be integrated into high school curricula. It is based on the complementary theories of Post-Traumatic Growth (PTG) and Transformative Learning (TL), which explain how positive psychological change can occur after a traumatic event disrupts a person’s assumptive worldview. The three segments of the TL process—questioning, exploring, and experimenting—facilitate PTG by transforming established beliefs into broader meaning perspectives that accommodate present realities. The framework below provides an organized approach to guiding high school students, staff, and communities through the full process of rebuilding global schemas after a shooting occurs. It can be implemented alongside existing crisis-response models, resulting in an expansion of their utility. Its guided-growth strategies can also be leveraged to reshape school culture and encourage collective action in the surrounding community, maximizing the possibility of positive worldview development.
Recommended Citation
Lunn, Lucienne; Campion, Karen; James, Steven; and Velez, Gabriel, "A Framework for Guiding Transformative Growth after School Shootings" (2021). College of Education Faculty Research and Publications. 580.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/edu_fac/580
Comments
Accepted version. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology. Vol. 27, No. 3 (August 2021): 486-496. DOI. © 2021 American Psychological Association. Used with permission. This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.