Emergency Response to School Violence At Central Mountain Middle School, there are several preventative measures and guidelines in place to prevent school violence. For starters, all visitors must enter through main office doors, sign in, and receive a nametag. If teachers see a visitor without a nametag, the individual must be escorted to the main office to retrieve a nametag. No one in the building is permitted to wear hats or hoods. This rule is in effect to assure we can see the faces of all individuals and can easily spot unfamiliar faces. Our preventative measures could improve. Anyone could come to the main office, sign in as a visitor, get a nametag, and then roam the halls. Yes, teachers are to inform the office when visitors are expected, but we all know we can be preoccupied with our work and forget to do so. In the past, I have had numerous parents come in for …show more content…
Once the announcement, “We are now on lockdown,” is made, all teachers follow a set of guidelines. All classroom lights must be turned off and doors locked. Teachers should direct students to hide in closets, get down on the floor, hide under desks or tables, and stay away from the doors. It is also suggested that window blinds be put down if it can be done quickly. However, the window blinds in the middle school are old and difficult to use. Students and teachers must refrain from using cellphones, but yet we have been told in the past to call 9-1-1 and school police to let them know we are in lockdown. Students and teachers are to remain hiding until an administrator or police officer opens our door. Doors are not to be opened for students and other individuals in the hallways. If physical education classes are outside, then they are to report to an alternate location, but no one knows the alternate
Twenty-six year old Christopher Harper-Mercer was a student enrolled in the Umpqua Community College. He shot eight students and injured 9 others. Harper committed suicide by shooting himself in the head. It was at 10:38 a.m. that the first call for 911 was made. Students said that the shooting began where the English and writing classes were located.
Many students already feel unsafe thinking that there will be a gun in their
With the new and improved security system and the setup of superintendents everyone who has to go through the superintendent in order to get into the school thus casing shady characters to not enter. On top of that with out current call in system for the doors to be open plus the security
Have you ever wondered what the minds of those responsible for school/mass shootings were thinking? In some cases, we CAN see inside the minds of these individuals/groups. How? With psychology. Through exploring frequently asked questions about the world of criminal psychology, we can learn so much about society.
The article stated that USI is the only public four-year university in Indiana that does not have armed officers on campus (USI Shield par 3). Frequently teachers keep their classroom doors open but normally they should be closed at all times and locked. It’s a lot safer for teachers and professors to keep their door locked and closed at all times during the day and while classes are in session. The faculty at USI had a meeting and talked about all these things and what they could do to improve some
If they needed to get in, then they will have to push a button, that automatically goes to the front office of that building and there is a camera facing each door so they can see who it is and they can either except or decline them to enter the building with high security supervision with the security they have on campus. Now if they had all these security systems in each school and all of them had the same security system so that each state would know what to do for every system during an emergency then each one would know how all of the systems work, instead of having different security systems for each state, then it would make it a lot more easier for them, and many people also believe that the people who install the system should have to go through a test as well to make sure they know who they are working with through their school systems instead of just some random person working on their security system. Many people don’t understand the importance of children’s mother and father worrying about them sending their children off to school, and many parents don’t know the answers to any of these questions that are frequently asked, now that many of these debates have been suggested and thought of over the years, and now that the debate is now over, many people are still upset with the
Safe But Subtle Do you feel like every time you turn on the news there is always something going on at schools? Whether it be school shootings or kids fighting. What if there was a way to fix all these problems? Having an armed guard could be a solution. By October 10, 2015 there had been 52 school shootings in 2015 alone.
Your child could be caught up in the next school shooting, and be killed. If only your school cared enough for their students and had a security guard, they would have been able to prevent the whole thing. Schools today still need more security, but how much security they have today, and what more security can and will prevent. Schools need more security today, we can reduce how many people die to school shootings each
I don’t ever remember a time where there weren’t security cameras in school hallways, but apparently before massive school shootings it wasn’t unheard of to be in a school with zero security cameras. Our school has never experienced a shooting, but we are prepared for one just the same as a school that has had one in the past. Many schools go even further than we do here at OHS in their security acts. Two years ago when our school went into lockdown, I was in Geometry class. None of my classmates or myself knew what was going on at the time; we just continued to follow the lesson that Mr. Koepplin was teaching on the board.
Such as counselors, therapist, and training for teachers to identify psychological problems in the classroom. The ability for students to utilize these services is a crucial element to respond to a school shooting emergency and prevention. • Provide funding for advanced security technology such as metal detectors at all entrances of school, security cameras placed inside and outside of school grounds. Also, requires a school resource officer on all campuses. • Congress and school officials should work together, creating policies requiring individual school and building safety plans, as well as district-wide safety plans that will serve as a guide to address the various safety needs in the school.
School shootings are a reoccurring problem in the United States. As of 2018, there have been over 18 school shootings in America (Cuddy). However, this is nothing new to us. Every year they are countless reports of school shootings ending in injury or death. It should be obvious that schools are the safest place for parents to send their children during the day, the sad truth is, it is not.
Now, wherever I go, I have to be careful and always have a trusted adult with me. You can never know when someone is going to do something crazy or where it’ll be. Once in awhile, my school has surprise lockdown drills. These practices prepare me in case someone comes onto my school campus and has a gun. Also, to prevent this even more, my school has a gate around it and if you want to come on the campus, you must be buzzed in by a school administrator.
But when a school is not safe, that can interfere with the student 's academics. There have been many instances of danger in schools in the past, that has led to tragedies. An answer to this dilemma is the use of metal detectors. They are effective and increase safety that can assist in ending violence in school environments. To prevent violence from happening again in schools, metal detectors should be installed in every public
Resolutions are vehemently being sought to protect schools from possible attacks and to objectively eradicate deadly school shootings altogether. Commonly, security officers are placed in schools in hopes that increased surveillance will inhibit violent outbreaks (Crawford and Burns 2016). Mixed evaluations have been found in association with security officers, while some benefits reportedly transpire, experiences of disparaging consequences remain a regrettable reality as well (Crawford and Burns 2016). Additionally, active shooter drills routinely occur at schools across the nation, however, as Jillian Peterson and James Densley report in their CNN article titled, “The Usual Approach to School Security Isn’t Working,” studies indicate that
When one hears "school security" these days, the word that goes with it is "tighten." Indeed, given both external threats and unruly (sometimes violent) student behavior, it makes sense to think that the most sensible course of action is to err on the side of more stringent measures, harsher sanctions and less permissive administration. It largely comes down to liability - whenever an individual with a history of troubled or criminal behavior snaps or becomes involved in an incident severe enough to attract government or media attention, many of the questions asked in the aftermath are variations on "why was this person not in jail. " The same applies to schools, where administrators often end up having to justify themselves to parents and