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Violent and Disruptive Incidents Report

Collection of Violent and Disruptive Incidents

Data Collection | Data Reporting | School Safety & Accountability


VADIR Data Collection for 2006-07 School Year Incidents


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VADIR Data Reporting


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School Safety and Accountability


Federal law requires each state to determine annually which public elementary and secondary schools are “persistently dangerous.”  Each state may set its own criteria to assess and compare levels of violence across schools. New York bases its “persistently dangerous” determinations on two years’ worth of VADIR data.  In August 2006 New York used a “School Violence Transitional Index” (SVTI) comprised of a sum of weighted incidents divided by the school’s K-12 enrollment.  Schools designated as persistently dangerous must submit to SED an Incident Reduction Plan explaining the steps to be taken to increase school safety.  In order to be removed from the list, the school superintendent (or chief executive officer of a charter school) must petition the Commissioner of Education.  Before the petition for removal is granted, SED will:

Once a school meets all of these conditions, the Commissioner (or his designee) may grant the petition and remove the school from the list of persistently dangerous schools. 

Safe Schools Against Violence in Education (SAVE) Reports

Safe Schools Against Violence in Education Act Report to the Governor and Legislature (MS Word) (December 2004)


More Information on VADIR and School Safety


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This page was last updated: July 1, 2008