Juvenile Justice in America – 9th Edition
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INSTRUCTOR’S
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MANUALO VE
Clemens Bartollas
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Stuart J. Miller
Comprehensive Test Bank& Online Instructor’s
Manual for Instructors and Students
© Clemens Bartollas & Stuart J. Miller
All rights reserved. Reproduction or distribution without permission is prohibited.
Created by MedConnoisseur ©2025/2026
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Juvenile Justice in America – 9th Edition
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Clemens Bartollas & Stuart J. Miller
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Chapter 1. Juvenile Justice: An Overview
Chapter 2. The Extent and Nature of Juvenile Crime
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Chapter 3. Causes of Juvenile Crime
Chapter 4. Gender and Juvenile Justice
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Chapter 5. The Prevention of Delinquency
Chapter 6. The Police
Chapter 7. The Juvenile Court
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Chapter 8. Juveniles in Adult Court VE
Chapter 9. Community Corrections
Chapter 10. Juvenile Institutionalization
Chapter 11. Juvenile Aftercare
Chapter 12. Treatment Technologies
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Chapter 13. Juvenile Gangs
Chapter 14. Drugs and Delinquency
Chapter 15. Juvenile Justice in the Twenty-First Century
Created by MedConnoisseur ©2025/2026
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To the Instructor
Contents
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Course Syllabus
Class Syllabus
CHAPTER 1 Juvenile Justice: An Overview
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CHAPTER 2 The Extent and Nature of Juvenile Crime
CHAPTER 3 Causes of Juvenile Crime
CHAPTER 4 Gender and Juvenile Justice
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CHAPTER 6 The Police
CHAPTER 7 The Juvenile Court
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CHAPTER 5 The Prevention of Delinquency 22
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CHAPTER 8 Juveniles in Adult Court
CHAPTER 9 Community Corrections
CHAPTER 10 Juvenile Institutionalization
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CHAPTER 11 Juvenile Aftercare OV 54
CHAPTER 12 Treatment Technologies 60
CHAPTER 13 Juvenile Gangs 64
CHAPTER 14 Drugs and Delinquency 70
CHAPTER 15 Juvenile Justice in the Twenty-First Century
Videos for Juvenile Justice Classes
Test Bank
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, ST To the Instructor
Juvenile Justice in America (9th Edition) provides an in-depth look at the lives of juveniles, their
experiences in society, and the consequences of those experiences. The text carefully examines
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the structures, procedures, policies, and problems of American juvenile justice agencies. The
Ninth Edition places further emphasis on delinquency prevention, and features a new chapter on
juvenile offender populations to give readers a more comprehensive view of delinquent youth.
Boxed features in every chapter highlight the practical realities of working in the juvenile justice
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system. The careful balance of theory, evidence-based findings, and practical applications gives
readers the most up-to-date insight into the state of juvenile justice in America today.
The instructor’s manual begins with an outline of the chapters to assist with lecture
preparation. Following the chapter outlines, there is a list of videos relevant to juvenile justice
topics. Finally, there is a test bank that includes multiple choice, true/false, fill-in-the-blank,
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matching, essay, and critical thinking questions that cover the information in each chapter. New
questions have been added and others edited either for the sake of clarity or to cover added new
materials.
This course can easily be set up in various weekly formats without having to adjust the point
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system. Graded assignments in every class are recommended in order to motivate students to
attend all classes. To add more graded assignments, you could offer fewer points for the
“Instructor Assigned” homework and have some in-class points added each week. You can offer
graded activities at the very beginning of classes and at the end of classes to encourage students
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to be to class on time and to remain at class until the end. These activities can be short quizzes
from prior lectures or can be quizzes at the end of class from the lecture offered during the class.
Points can be offered for correct answers or for participation. Games can be played in which
questions are asked from prior learning and the students can receive a grade for participating.
It might help to “sell” the paper to the students in a way that helps them realize that it isn’t
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just a paper, but more of a research project that can benefit them in finding out more about the
field they want to work in, or just want to learn more about. Hopefully the students who have
used too many drugs or committed too many crimes will find out early where they can and can’t
work before they dedicate too much time into the wrong areas. ?
If possible, try to bring in a few guest speakers. Let the students know in week one that you
would like 2–3 guest speakers and ask them to contact you if they have any relatives or friends
who could qualify. You could either have the student invite the speakers or you could obtain
contact info and invite the speakers yourself. Usually about 45 minutes is sufficient for a speaker
to talk about what they do and what road they took to get there. They can offer some advice to
those interested in their field and answer questions.
For the first class, it is a good idea to make a quiz on the syllabus and have each student take
it for a grade or just for your own records. If you do this as a graded assignment, you would need
to adjust your point system to allow more points to be earned. Another option for the first and last
class is a pretest and a posttest. A 25–50-question quiz can easily be put together using the test
bank that is provided at the end of this manual.
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