2014/08/03

Training & Education Are Schools Focusing Too Much on the Active Shooter Scenario?

Experts say the training and security measures focused on school shootings are flawed and overshadow more common types of violence on campus.


All-Hazards Approach


The emphasis on an active shooter scenario detracts from other important trainings like tornado drills, CPR and shelter in place, Dorn and Lavarello said. And school districts, deluged with quick fixes from vendors, are investing in things they don’t necessarily need.

“We do a lot of school safety assessments and I get the million-dollar question: ‘What do I need? Do I need cameras? Metal detectors? Retina scanning?’” Lavarello said. “We tell them to take a step back and truly look at what the needs are.”

The way to do that is through an assessment, which can be done by a professional or even a principal from another school. But oftentimes the most important security measure lacking on campus is supervision.

Lavarello said he recently did an assessment for a school district in a city that was ready to shell out nearly $5 million on walkthrough metal detectors. He was on several of the district’s campuses for hours at a time before anyone approached him to ask who he was and what he was doing there. At one point there were nearly 40 buses unloading children, he said, and not one administrator or adult was around other than the bus drivers to inquire as to who he was.

“Here the district was ready to make this huge purchase and yet they weren’t even doing the simple things.”

Dorn agreed, saying supervision is almost always implicated when a student is killed on or near campus. More emphasis on student supervision will reduce the number of deaths from tornado, school traffic fatalities, suicide, and reduce bullying, child abduction and sexual molestation, he said. “And it’s cheaper than teaching people how to pack a gun.”

Part of that is just being available, greeting students as they arrive at school, communicating with them and developing a rapport. Cameras are great but they are mostly used as evidence and schools usually don’t review video at the end of the day.

Amy Klinger, director of programs at the Educator’s School Safety Network, acknowledged that it’s fine to purchase buzzers, locks, cameras, metal detectors, etc., but it’s also important to realize that they are but a first line of defense and that there must be a second line. She said if someone wants to get onto school grounds, they will, so there’d better be a second line of defense, and that should be trained, alert personnel.

Like Dorn and Lavarello, Klinger does intruder assessments and finds the same things: Nobody engages the visitor. “That’s a huge vulnerability for schools,” she said. “Maybe they’re there to steal iPhones or snatch a kid or shoot up a school — you don’t know.”

Dorn said de-escalation training is a no-brainer because it works. Evidenced-based anti-bullying programs work as does training on pattern matching recognition — learning how to spot a desperate individual can help administrators become more able to detect danger and act accordingly to de-escalate it.

Assessment training should not just be about who the next shooter might be but who has the potential to be violent to one’s self or to others in any way. It could be merely a student who appears to be engaging in risk-taking behavior all the way up to a person who projects the ability to be violent.

Klinger said that in more than 75 percent of school shootings, three or more adults were concerned about the individual prior to the shooting, and threat assessments and appropriate training are ways to connect the dots. “But it also is predicting kids at risk for suicide, self-mutilation, substance abuse or running away. So it’s exactly what we need to be doing because it’s an all-hazards approach to preventing these events.”

Schools, businesses and the public have — for the most part — waited for law enforcement to arrive on the scene during situations like an active shooter. But prior collaboration with law enforcement, and fire and EMS is an important part of mitigating events.

“School districts and colleges should reach out to local first responders and develop a relationship and an understanding of how things work in each realm,” Lavarello said. They should go hand in hand to make kids learn to their maximum capacity.”
 (My turn) so my rebuttal to this is as follows, you have to take some things into effect. 
1.) Not all schools have Public Safety Officers  or SRO's or Security, 2 reasons why one they cant afford them, two they are afraid having someone armed in the school may draw more attention to their school. or that the person that is there and has the weapons to protect them may not be competent enough.
2.) You have to look at the response time of  LE, FD,EMS,  most range and very between 8-10 mins sometimes even longer. there are very few that can get there faster then that. What is that its reality.Helping train students yes that may help but it helps put students and teachers in danger as well. it might prolong the attacker but someone will get hurt in that 8-10 mins  alot of injuries can be inflicted. 
3.) your probably asking yourself what my answer to this is. well let me share statistics with you first, 
you have a 75% higher chance of being in a active shooter situation in a high school, and higher education setting then you do in any other setting. you have a 50 percent chance in middle school, and 25 percent in elementary, this was data collected from 1989-June 10th 2014 at the Oregon high-school shooting. 
There should be a grant formed that would allow for hiring and training and arming,of public safety officer, that could help deter the situations like that from happening, there should also be a  Emergency Management Specialist, hired for each district, or school or college, to work on mitigation more thoroughly. A Risk Management Study should be conducted by the EMSO as well to see if there is way to Improve things.
Also please keep in mind there is no real way to totally plan for everything every good emergency manger knows that but trying to train to prevent something from happening, or mitigate it, does help.

-chris

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