"No one can wake up a jaded, angry teenager
like Michael Pritchard"
April 2000 is the anniversary of the shootings
at Columbine. To help our children and ourselves contend with
the unspeakable shootings by children, KQED presents Saving
Our Schools from Hate and Violence (SOS). Youth counselor
and humorist Michael Pritchard, whose remarkable abilities communicating
with young people make his new series a "must see" for all of
us troubled about youth violence, hosts these two 30-minute
programs. The hard-hitting episodes provide a rare glimpse into
the daily lives of teenagers now struggling with the violence
and school shootings that have changed our national landscape.
Imagine teenagers saying more than "whatever,"
or just grunting when adults ask them questions. Picture teens
actually listening, mesmerized by an adult talking to them about
serious matters. Watch teenagers engaged and animated as they
talk to adults about what they really think, feel, face, are
dealing with and troubled by. Then think Saving Our Schools
from Hate and Violence and Michael Pritchard.
Adults pay huge sums of money and go to great
lengths to learn how to communicate with young people. Michael
Pritchard can show them how Ð and he does it extraordinarily
well, with sensitivity and humor. Pritchard has an amazing ability
to listen to children, ask good questions, and get the kids
to talk.
The hope is that things will improve if teenagers
can recognize, communicate and express their feelings. We can
also learn from adolescents. Teenagers can teach us a great
deal about the fear, cruelty, hazing, social isolation, racial
slurs, suicidal students, etc., that accompanies their lives
every single day.
It's astonishing to hear one teen say, "[When
a school shooting happens] we all know exactly why, and we know
what he feels like. We pretend weÕre shocked, but we know...";
another, talking about how people need to cry when they are
hurt, says "If they do not cry with tears, they will cry with
bullets." The special impact of this series is that the information
comes directly from the young people who are dealing daily with
the violence rather than secondhand from adult experts.
Saving Our Schools from Hate and Violence
was taped in two Northern California high schools where Michael
addresses students in large assemblies and interacts with them
in smaller discussion groups.
Saving Our Schools from Hate and Violence
is produced by Heartland Media. Veteran Producer is Jim Watson.
The series is presented by KQED and distributed to public television
stations nationwide by American Public Television. It is produced
with the underwriting support of SeeÕs
Candies.