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 Section 6 Stereotypes and School Shootings
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 In the last section, we discussed five aspects of weak or  mixed signals that can interfere with the ability to identify children at risk  within the school system.  These five  aspects are masters of disguise, fragmentation, "just laugh it off," perceived  overreactions, and the perception that teachers cannot do anything.  Questions concerning breaking the confidentiality  boundary to uphold the Tarasoff mandate "to protect" were also posed. In this section, we will discuss six cultural scripts that  influence a shooter’s decision to commit a violent act. These six scripts are changing social status  through performance, independence from adults, living with it, running away or  suicide, violent fantasies, and threats.
 How in fact do socially marginal, psychologically depressed youths, like the shooters we have so far discussed, manage the pressures they  experience? Certainly youth like Michael  Carneal suffer from low social status, difficult social interactions, social  marginality, and weak claims to a masculine identity, as evidenced in Michael’s  case by the newspaper article accusing him of being gay.
 As you know, one of the problem solving  strategies available to these troubled youths is the employment of cultural  scripts. Analyses of shooters like  Michael have revealed that these troubled youth are locked into a pattern of escalating, more radical, and still unsuccessful scripts.
 6 Cultural Scripts
 ♦  Script # 1 - Changing Social Status Through PerformanceThe first of these cultural scripts for coping with marginality  and social pressure is by changing social position through performance. Michael’s use of this script was conveyed in  his attempts to be the class clown, by setting off stink bombs and imitating cartoon  characters. However, as you know, acting  the class clown is often not a successful method through which a marginalized  student can gain acceptance, attention, and relief from teasing.
 In Michael’s case, his desperate and wild  attempts at being the class clown in fact opened him up to more social  marginalization.  As you know, social marginalization refers to  a student being pushed by other students into the position of an unpopular social outsider in the outer margins of social acceptance. ♦  Script # 2 - Independence from AdultsI have frequently been asked why students like Michael do  not ask advice from adults on how to improve their social position.  In terms of the second cultural script for  coping with social marginalization, this is because the script of asking for help flies in the face of the script of adolescence and masculinity, which emphasizes  independence from adults. In the beginning,  Michael did in fact confide in his mother, but as he got older he became aware  of the social stigma attached to those who were "weak" enough to go to an adult,  especially a mother, for advice.
 ♦ Script # 3 - Living with ItIn addition to changing social status through performance  and independence from adults, a third, and commonly employed cultural script is "just living with it." Certainly both  Michael and Mitchell Johnson employed this script. However, as you know, this script is not  necessarily a practical strategy. Both  Michael and Mitchell became trapped in downward spirals, trying to laugh off or ignore increasingly harsh teasing. In  the end, both boys desperately looked for an exit from a cultural script which  did not bring them either peace of mind or improved social status.
 ♦  Script # 4 - Running Away or SuicideAt this point, a fourth cultural script for dealing with  social marginalization and pain is suicide or running away.  Michael and Mitchell both displayed suicidal  tendencies. However, these are  perceived, especially by boys, as weak options. Evidence suggests that school shooters are  looking for status-winning, manhood enhancing departures.
 By leaving police no choice but to shoot, a  troubled youth can, in his or her mind, effectively commit "suicide by cop," achieving the desired end while holding to a code of strength or masculinity. This point of view is summed up in the words  of Bethel, Alaska  school shooter Evan Ramsey, who indicated his initial intention was merely to scare  people and then kill himself. Ramsey  ended up not killing himself and stated later he ultimately decided he wanted to  "go out with a bang."    ♦ Script # 5 - Violent FantasiesA fifth cultural script, closely related to the decision  that suicide and running away are "weak" options is that of violent fantasy. Michael Carneal soon began to fantasize about  violent steps he could take to improve his status. In his fantasy world, Michael could for a  change not be the weakling unable to fight back, but the man who caused others  to quake in their boots.
 Mitchell and  his partner Andrew Golden apparently fantasized together for months about how violent actions could change the  way they were perceived in the school social system. However, Michael and other shooters soon  found that no amount of this fantasizing could change or alleviate what seemed  to them an unbearable reality of marginalization and bullying. ♦ Script # 6 - ThreatsIn addition to changing social status through performance,  independence from adults, living with it, running away or suicide, and violent  fantasies, the sixth cultural scripted enacted by Michael and other shooters is  often threats.  In trying to establish themselves as people to be respected, men capable of doing big things if   pushed, Mitchell Johnson and Andrew told a large number of people about their plans  in an attempt to redefine themselves through their threats.
 Had this been successful, this may have obviated  the perceived "need" for the shootings. However, the boys were not taken seriously.  Mitchell and Andrew found themselves under enormous pressure to follow through on their threats. This was largely motivated by the cultural  script of masculinity that dictates that failing to follow through is a sign of  weakness and "being a wimp," which could further erode an already tenuous social  position.  In Michael Carneal’s case,  the morning of the shooting, several individuals Michael had boasted to of his  plans to do "something big" gathered at the prayer circle. When it appeared briefly that Michael would not  carry out his threats, they appeared to lose interest, which frustrated Michael  and appears to have strengthened his resolve to carry out his threat. Reflecting on the Tarasoff "duty to warn" case, how do you  feel these cultural scripts interact with the duty to protect?  Should an awareness of these social scripts  be included in a risk assessment analysis of a troubled youth? Ellen, 16, was close friends with her cousin, Billy, age  14.  Billy had had difficulty adjusting to high school, and was not very popular. Ellen stated, "Last week during gym, Billy put blue dye in Mark’s hair  gel. Mark’s really popular, and I guess  Billy was trying to be funny. 
 "But Mark  is blonde, and when he spiked his hair after his shower he looked awful. Billy told me his whole plan backfired… now  Mark and his buddies are out to get him.  I told Billy he was an idiot for trying a stunt like that… that’s no way  to get popular! But Billy got real mad…  he got all worked up and said some scary things! I don’t think I handled it real well when  Billy told me what he did.  What should I  have said to get him to talk to me without getting mad?"
 ♦ Technique: Active Listening Without Words I suggested Ellen might try using the "Active Listening  without Words" technique. I stated, "If  you are unsure what to say to Billy, a sympathetic sound, words, or gesture  might help him think better and feel better. This will show Billy you are listening and understanding, but give him  time to think things through and tell you how he’s really feeling."
 
 Think of your Ellen. Would Active Listening without Words be  useful for him or her?
 In this section, we have discussed six cultural scripts that  influence a shooter’s decision to commit a violent act.  These six scripts are changing social status  through performance, independence from adults, living with it, running away or  suicide, violent fantasies, and threats. In the next section, we will discuss three factors that may  prevent children from reporting threats from another student to adults.  These three factors are violent language and  the presumption of innocence, the adolescent code, and perceptual frames.Reviewed 2023
 
 Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
 Goodrum, S., Thompson, A. J., Ward, K. C., & Woodward, W. (2018). A case study on threat assessment: Learning critical lessons to prevent school violence. Journal of Threat Assessment and Management, 5(3), 121–136."
 
 Markey, P. M., Ivory, J. D., Slotter, E. B., Oliver, M. B., & Maglalang, O. (2019). He does not look like video games made him do it: Racial stereotypes and school shootings. Psychology of Popular Media Culture. Advance online publication.
 
 Raitanen, J., & Oksanen, A. (2019). Deep interest in school shootings and online radicalization. Journal of Threat Assessment and Management, 6(3-4), 159–172.
 Vieselmeyer, J., Holguin, J., & Mezulis, A. (2017). The role of resilience and gratitude in posttraumatic stress and growth following a campus shooting. Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy, 9(1), 62–69. QUESTION 6 What  are six cultural scripts that influence a shooter’s decision to commit a  violent act? 
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