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Wiley Handbooks in Education

The Wiley Handbooks in Education offer a capacious and comprehensive overview of higher education in a global context. These state‐of‐the‐art volumes offer a magisterial overview of every sector, sub‐field and facet of the discipline‐from reform and foundations to K‐12 learning and literacy. The Handbooks also engage with topics and themes dominating today’s educational agenda‐mentoring, technology, adult and continuing education, college access, race and educational attainment. Showcasing the very best scholarship that the discipline has to offer, The Wiley Handbooks in Education will set the intellectual agenda for scholars, students, researchers for years to come.

The Wiley Handbook on Violence in Education: Forms, Factors, and Preventions by Harvey Shapiro (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of Global Educational Reform by Kenneth J. Saltman (Editor) and Alexander J. Means (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of Ethnography of Education by Dennis Beach (Editor), Carl Bagley (Editor), and Sofia Marques da Silva (Editor)

The Wiley International Handbook of History Teaching and Learning by Scott Alan Metzger (Editor) and Lauren McArthur Harris (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of Christianity and Education by William Jeynes (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of Diversity in Special Education by Marie Tejero Hughes (Editor) and Elizabeth Talbott (Editor)

The Wiley International Handbook of Educational Leadership by Duncan Waite (Editor) and Ira Bogotch (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of Social Studies Research by Meghan McGlinn Manfra (Editor) and Cheryl Mason Bolick (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of School Choice by Robert A. Fox (Editor) and Nina K. Buchanan (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of Home Education by Milton Gaither (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of Cognition and Assessment: Frameworks, Methodologies, and Applications by Andre A. Rupp (Editor) and Jacqueline P. Leighton (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook of Learning Technology by Nick Rushby (Editor) and Dan Surry (Editor)

The Wiley Handbook on Violence in Education

Forms, Factors, and Preventions

Edited by Harvey Shapiro












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Notes on the Editors

Book Editor

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Harvey Shapiro, PhD, is Clinical Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Education of the College of Professional Studies at Northeastern University. His primary areas of scholarship are interpretations of violence in education, ethical leadership, interdisciplinarity, the philosophies of Giorgio Agamben, Jacques Derrida, and John Dewey, and modern Hebrew literature. In addition to his work that has appeared in Educational Theory, Educational Philosophy and Theory, the Philosophy of Education Society Yearbook, the International Journal of Jewish Education Research, Jewish Education, Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, and the Journal of Modern Jewish Studies, he is the author of Educational Theory and Jewish Studies in Conversation: From Volozhin to Bucascz (Lexington Books, 2013). Prior to his appointment at Northeastern University in 2008, Dr. Shapiro served as Dean of the Graduate School of Education at Hebrew College in Newton, Massachusetts, principal of Cohen Hillel Academy in Marblehead, Massachusetts, principal of the Stephen S. Wise Middle School in Los Angeles, California, and Director of the UAHC Swig Camp Institute in Saratoga, California.

Section 2 Editor, “Group and Gang Violence in Education”

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Emily E. Tanner‐Smith, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Department of Counseling Psychology and Human Services at the University of Oregon. Her research focuses broadly on adolescent development, and seeks to identify effective programs and policies for promoting healthy youth development. As an applied research methodologist with emphasis in systematic reviewing and meta‐analysis, her recent work has focused on the social epidemiology, prevention, and treatment of adolescent substance use and delinquency. Her recent research appears in the Journal of Developmental and Life‐course Criminology, Journal of Youth and Adolescence, Prevention Science, and Review of Educational Research.

Section 3 Editor, “Bullying, Sexual Violence, and Suicide in Education”

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Dorothy L. Espelage, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Florida. She is the recipient of the APA Lifetime Achievement Award in Prevention Science and the 2016 APA Award for Distinguished Contributions to Research in Public Policy, and is a Fellow of APS, APA, and AERA. She earned her PhD in Counseling Psychology from Indiana University in 1997. Over the last 22 years, she has authored over 170 peer‐ reviewed articles, six edited books, and 70 chapters on bullying, homophobic teasing, sexual harassment, dating violence, and gang violence. Her research focuses on translating empirical findings into prevention and intervention programming and she has secured over $10 million of external funding.