Suicide
Materials for Loan
Coordinated School Health Resource
Center
Florida Department of Education
850-245-0480 (phone)
866-312-6497 (In-state toll free phone)
850-245-5116 (fax)
cshp@fldoe.org
Suicide Materials for Loan
#310713 Act for Health:
Using Theater to Teach Tough Teen Topics. ETR Associates, 1991.
This book assists educators in using theater to promote awareness and
discussion of sensitive teen issues. Topics include substance abuse,
HIV/AIDS, suicide, and sexual abuse. Over a dozen provocative monologues,
rap songs, and scenes written by real students are included. (softcover, 162
pages)
Grade: Middle, High
Format: Print
#310460 Adolescent
Suicide: A School-based Approach to Assessment and Intervention.
Research Press, 1993.
Designed for educators and counselors, this book presents information on
adolescent suicide. Chapters focus on probable causes, suicide risk
assessment, depression, interventions, and school crisis teams. (softcover,
175 pages)
Grade: Middle, High
Format: Print
#310739
Day for Night: Recognizing Teenage Depression. Vanderpool Films, 1999.
For teachers and student services personnel, this video describes the signs
and symptoms of teenage depression. It does so through interviews with
recovering students, parents, and a child psychologist. The different types
of depression are explained along with the biological basis and recovery
strategies. (25 mins.)
Grade: Middle, High
Format: Video
#312620 Depression and Other
Mood Disorders in the School Community (Health in Action, vol. 1, no. 2,
November/December, 2002)
American School Health
Association, 2002.
This issue of "Health in Action" addresses depression as a treatable mental
illness. It includes facts about depression, how to respond to depression in
middle and high school students, school-based programs to prevent suicide,
and information for students and families. (softcover, 23 pages)
Grade: Middle, High
Format: Print
#310673 Dying Is Not an
Option: Thinking about Suicide. Human Relations Media, 1996.
In the first part of this video, a series of powerful stories from real
young people who have suffered from depression, have attempted suicide, or
have lost a family member to suicide is presented. In part two, intended for
teachers and counselors, a psychologist specializing in adolescent
depression describes the warning signs of suicide. This video is accompanied
by a teacher's guide and student handouts. 58 mins.
Grade: High
Format: Video
#310743
Florida Youth Suicide Prevention
Study: Report to the Florida State
Legislature -- September 1999.
University of South Florida, Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health
Institute, Department of Child and Family Studies, 1999.
This report describes the results of a survey of professionals, parents, and
youth about suicide and their communities' attitudes, needs, and resources.
Regional resources are listed. (softcover, 125 pages)
Format: Print
#312142.A-C Helping Troubled
Youth: The Columbia
Teen Screen Suicide Prevention Program.
Columbia University, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 2002.
This folder contains materials about the Columbia Teen Screen Program, a
program that screens teenagers to identify those who are at-risk for suicide
and then ensures that they receive treatment. The goal of the program is to
establish model screening programs across the country that address the unmet
mental health needs of adolescents. The folder contains a booklet, a
brochure, and an overview sheet.
Grade: Middle, High
Format: Print
#312113 Kids Count Data Book:
State Profiles of Child Well-Being (rev. ed.) Annie E. Casey
Foundation, 2004.
This data book is intended to illuminate the conditions facing America's
children and to assess trends in their well-being. The ten key indicators
represented are low birth-weight babies percentage; infant mortality rate;
child death rate; teen death rate; teen birth rate; high school dropout
percentage; teens not attending school and not working; children living in
families where no parent has full-time, year-round employment; child
poverty; and children in single parent households. (softcover, 212 pages)
Grade: Infant/Toddler (0-2), Prekindergarten (3-4), Middle, High, Elementary
Format: Print
#310701 Mental Health Services
in Schools: Journal of School Health Topical Package. American School
Health Association, 1999.
This book offers a compilation of 47 articles published in the "Journal of
School Health" from 1987 to 1998 on all aspects of school mental health
services. The articles cover web resources in school mental health,
depression, self-esteem, peer mediation, immigrant youth issues,
confidentiality of student records, sexual harassment, school crisis
response teams, and bereavement issues. (softcover, 208 pages)
Format: Print
#311399 National Strategy for
Suicide Prevention: Goals and Objectives for Action. U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, 2001.
This document from the U.S. Surgeon General outlines a national strategy to
prevent suicide. Among the recommendations is a call for the formation of
public/private community partnerships to explore ways to provide mental
health support to schools. It also recommends increasing the number of
school districts in which school-based clinics incorporate mental health and
substance abuse assessment and management into their scope of activities. (softcover,
204 pages)
Format: Print
#310326 Programs for the
Prevention of Suicide among Adolescents and Young Adults/Suicide Contagion
and the Reporting of Suicide: Recommendations from a National Workshop.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Epidemiology Program Office,
1994.
The first part of this report summarizes eight suicide prevention strategies
and provides general recommendations for the development, implementation,
and evaluation of suicide prevention programs targeted toward 15 to 24
year-olds. The second part of this report addresses concerns on reducing the
possibility of media-related suicide contagion. These recommendations
outline general issues that public officials and health and media
professionals should consider when reporting about suicide. (softcover, 18
pages)
Format: Print
#312456 Suicide and Depression
(Real People Series) Sunburst Visual Media, 2002.
This program provides viewers with essential information about the warning
signs of, and the myths about, depression and suicide. Using profiles of
real teens, scenarios, and insights from nationally recognized experts, this
program sensitizes viewers to the issues of depression and suicide. Best
used with students in grades 8-12 and other young adults. (25 mins.)
Grade: Middle, High, Postsecondary
Format: Video
#310548 Suicide Prevention in
the Schools: Guidelines for Middle and High School Settings. American
Counseling Association, 1994.
Written for counselors and for middle and high school educators, this book
offers statistics on youth suicide and explores the dynamics of suicide. It
also provides guidelines for early detection of suicidal preoccupation,
prevention, and crisis management. (softcover, 127 pages)
Grade: Middle, High
Format: Print
#312146 Suicide: Substance
Abuse Resource Guide.
U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, 2000.
This is a bibliography of materials on the subject of suicide. Some of the
materials concern the link between suicide and substance abuse. (softcover,
14 pages)
Format: Print
#310453 Teen Suicide.
Cambridge Educational, 1994.
This video helps high school students recognize suicide warning signs, learn
the importance of communication, and identify what to do to prevent suicide
for themselves or a friend.
Grade: High
Format: Video
#310698 Teen Suicide: I Don't
Really Want to Leave. Lucerne Media, 1996.
Requiring careful teacher previewing, this powerful video is a dramatization
of the feelings and emotions of a teenage girl who is contemplating suicide.
The viewer will gain insight about adolescent suicide and be able to
recognize warning signs a person may be exhibiting. It is also valuable for
adults working with teens. 10 mins.
Grade: High
Format: Video
#311525.A When Death Impacts
Your School: A Guide for School Administrators. The Dougy Center, 2000.
This is a guidebook about death for school leaders. It provides information
appropriate for a school community trying to cope after a death. Strong
leadership gives people the sense of security needed to begin the healing
process after a death. Included topics are the principal's role in helping
grieving students and staff; responding to a death in the school; a
long-term plan relating to six principles of grief; and special
considerations about the type of death (from chronic illness, accidental,
and stigmatized deaths). (softcover, 56 pages)
Grade: Elementary, Middle, High
Format: Print
#310319 Youth Suicide
Prevention Programs: A Resource Guide. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, 1992.
This resource guide describes the rationale and evidence for the
effectiveness of various youth suicide prevention strategies and identifies
model programs that incorporate these different strategies. (softcover, 190
pages)
Format: Print
#312058 Youth Suicide: The
School's Role in Prevention and Response. Phi Delta Kappa Educational
Foundation, 1999.
This is an excellent source of information on the subject of youth suicide.
It is a resource that educators can use in developing efforts to prevent
suicide, and when such efforts fail, to effectively respond to the aftermath
of a student's death. (softcover, 89 pages)
Format: Print
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