4-H holds high school assembly to teach kids warning signs of domestic abuse
A Santa
Clara County 4-H Club staged an assembly for Westmont High School students in
Campbell, Calif., March 7 to teach young people how to avoid common, but
unhealthy, patterns in teenage relationships that could escalate to domestic
violence. Local
Assemblymember Rebecca Cohn’s personal interest in the subject prompted the 4-H
members to delve into the very personal, and often very private disintegration
of love relationships into emotional and physical abuse. “I
grew up in a family with violence.
On a daily basis, my stepfather beat my mother. It was an extreme distraction and very
upsetting,” said Cohn as she spoke to the 1,100 high school students, the third
largest group of people she has addressed since taking office two and a half
years ago. “It took
me 15 years to say something to another person. That person was a high school drama
teacher, who took the time to listen and offer support. It was because of my drama teacher,”
Cohn said, her voice breaking with emotion, “that I am standing here
today.” The
leadership committee of the El Sereno 4-H Club hoped to make a similar
difference in the lives of Westmont High School students. Teenagers, some of
them 4-H members, acted in three vignettes to give students vivid examples of
relationships heading down a destructive path. In the
first skit, a boyfriend and girlfriend are speaking on the phone. “So you
like Kyle better than me?” the girl asks indignantly when her beau explains he
must help a friend that evening rather than spend time with her. Eventually she insists he choose between
his friend and her love. In
another skit, a boyfriend loudly criticizes the length of his girlfriend’s skirt
in front of others. The couple
continues to throw barbs and insults at one another, leading to his pushing her
violently into a car dashboard and blaming his actions on her for “making me so
mad.” The
lesson: trying to control someone
or being controlled by someone are signs of an unhealthy relationship. Holding up posters, 4-H members outlined
the traits of a healthy love relationship, including respect, communication,
understanding, trust and honesty. The 4-H
club leadership group that pulled the assembly together was Margo Lang, Julisia
Banach and Jennifer Ku. In June
2002, they attended the 4-H California Focus program in Sacramento, during which
they met Assemblymember Cohn and learned about her commitment to protecting
people from domestic violence. The
trio decided that educating local teens about domestic violence would be the
action plan they take home from California Focus. Through
the assemblymember’s office, they linked up with Next Door Solutions to Domestic
Violence, an organization that provided the scripts for the skits. They
contacted numerous agencies that provide support to people in abusive
relationships and produced a flyer so all teens at the high school would know
where to go if they need help. “The
girls didn’t even know what domestic violence was before they went to Sacramento
to meet their legislators,” said the girls’ 4-H leader Deborah Lang, Margo’s
mother. “In school, they learn
about sexually transmitted diseases, AIDS, alcohol and drug abuse, but nobody
tells them how to treat each other in a relationship.” Putting
together the hour-long assembly was challenging, she said, but, “for 4-H’ers,
‘hard’ isn’t a barrier.” The three girls plan to present the assembly to students at
other local high schools and to create a packet of materials and instructions
for youth-adult teams to use to produce domestic violence education programs for
their own high schools or communities.