Crisis Reactions
Ripple Effect
Property Crime
Names, Faces & Hearts
Impact on Others & Responsibilities
100

This common immediate reaction involves the body going into "shock" or feeling numb.

What is shock. 

100

True or False: A ripple effect describes the way a criminal escape after a crime. 

False: it describes how the impact of a single crime spreads from the victim to family, friends, and he whole community. 

100

This is entering a home or building illegally to commit a crime

What is Burglary 

100

This is a formal agreement, a document recording agreement.

What is a contract. 

100

One way crime affects a school is by forcing the district to spend money on this instead of books or sports.

What is security 

200

Victims may feel this emotion toward themselves, even though they did nothing wrong.

What is guilt.

200

When a person is afraid to walk in their neighborhood after a nearby break-in, it’s an example of the ripple effect on this group.

What is the community. 

200

Taking something that isn't yours (shoplifting, snatching a phone)

What is Theft/Larceny 

200

Accepting responsibility; when a crime occurs, the offender must do something to help the victim, the offender must try to right the wrong

What is accountability. 
200

this is made up of people living in a certain area or neighborhood.  This can also be a group of students who attend the same school of people with the same interest such as members of a sports team or church. 

What is a community.  

300

This is the body's natural "fight or flight" response triggered during a scary event.

What is trauma response 

300

This term describes how the impact of one crime spreads outward like waves in a pond.

What is a Ripple effect 

300

This is the term for a court-ordered payment an offender makes to a victim to cover the cost of stolen or damaged items.

What is restitution.  

300

This is a person(s), group, business, organization or community that has been harmed or injured due to criminal activity. 

What is a crime victim

300

When a parent is arrested, this group of people often experiences the "ripple" of losing a caregiver or income.

Who is the offender's family?

400

True or False:

A victim might experience "hyper-vigilance," which means they are constantly "on guard" or overly alert to danger.

True

400

These are the three main types of "ripples" or impacts a victim experiences: Physical, Emotional, and this one related to money.

Financial Impact

400

This is the "image" or "standing" you have in the eyes of others. 

What is one's reputation. 

400

To mend, fix, put back together, restore

What is Repairing harm. 

400

This is the main goal of a "Victim Impact" curriculum for the person who committed the crime.

What is taking responsibility (or building empathy/awareness)?

500

Victims may feel this emotion toward themselves, even though they did nothing wrong.

What is guilt (or shame)?


500

This represents the visible consequences and changes in a person's life after a crime occurs.

What is a "Ripple Effect"

500

This consequence discusses how property crimes can move from "misdemeanor" to "felony" based on the dollar amount or the use of force. Mention the "Permanent Record” how a property crime conviction can block them from getting a job in retail, banking, or government.

What is a Legal Consequence 

500

A person who has a share or an interest in an organization, project or outcome. 

What is a stakeholder.

500

True or False: 

If a student steals a laptop from a classroom. It does not impact the community.

False

M
e
n
u