By J.C. Bowman
In 1987 I began my teaching career. The classroom that I taught in then is now a vestige of the past and we are continuously redefining what the modern school or classroom should look like.
Student discipline is a complicated and often uneven process in our schools, with board policies and state laws often failing to keep up to date. To be fair, students in schools have always misbehaved, impacting their ability to learn along with the other students around them. These problems have escalated to such a point that it has helped drive good people out of the classroom and negatively influenced people willing to become teachers. This is especially true in schools with a reputation for having a culture of discipline issues or weak community support.
We are seeing violence against teachers and other children escalate. While active shooter events in schools are still rare, since 1970, there have been 2,069 incidents involving the discharge of a firearm on school property and 684 people have died with 1,937 injured. We know 43% of the incidents have involved a student attending the school.
Youth violence is one of the greatest crime problems faced in the United States. The FBI has done an extensive study on this subject and has partnered with state and local governments to develop prevention and enforcement programs.
Ed Week observed that school shooters normally have several things in common: “They suffered early-childhood trauma and exposure to violence at a young age. They were angry or despondent over a recent event, resulting in feelings of suicidality.” Mental health is now a critical element in public education.
It bears reiterating that active shooter events in schools are still rare, when they happen, they have tragic outcomes.
On May 24, the deadliest school shooting in Texas history occurred in a Uvalde, Texas school that was safe, according to its written safety plans but had a “culture of noncompliance with safety policies.”
Even the police responders ignored their active shooter training. The result was that two teachers and 19 elementary school students were senselessly murdered, and seventeen others injured. The Texas House of Representatives issued a report that “found systemic failures and egregious poor decision making” by law enforcement. More importantly, they failed to establish “reliable communications.”
The report pointed out something that every community and school is aware of: “No school could ever be built to prevent every conceivable threat, but they can be built and operated in ways to better mitigate risk and impede potential threats from outside attackers.”
School safety is now something all educators can no longer ignore and must confront. Teachers are now at the front lines of the school safety debate. We can no longer ignore the threat.
As a Marine, I carried an M16A2 assault rifle. I also used to fire a .50 Caliber Machine Gun and M60. The M16 fires 5.56mm (or .223 caliber) ammunition. The AR-15 is the most popular rifle—a type of which was used in the Uvalde mass shooting— in the country today and is remarkably like the M16. The rounds come out of the barrel at a high rate of speed, when you hit a person, they often leave sizeable entry and exit wounds that are not clean. The fragments puncture and damage the adjacent tissue.
The medical community is pushing for people to learn how to stop victims from bleeding out before first responders arrive in shootings. Broward County Medical Director Dr. Peter Antevy said, “We have to have the general public understand that they are the first line of defense.” Our guess is the Stop the Bleed program will also be added to the growing list of tasks that educators must learn.
Soldiers sometimes get numb to death, but it is unnatural to kill someone else and educators never expected to address institutional safety from an evidence-based best practice approach focusing on the social, emotional, mental, and physical factors in their job description. They never expected a debate that they need to carry a firearm to even teach a class. They never thought they may need to learn how to stop a child or colleague from bleeding out before first responders arrive.
Mike Conrad, a teacher in Detroit said, “I think that the moment that you put a gun on the hip of a teacher in a classroom, that we have accepted the norm that school shootings will not stop, that we are now on the front line to defend against them, instead of trying to find a way to stop them.”
We need real solutions to these problems. A starting point includes the need to make our schools and classrooms safer with updated security features. We suggest including better tracking and reporting of conduct problems, delinquency, acting out problems, student aggression and violence, and social information processing variables.
Parents should restrict children’s exposure to violence in media and social media. It is critical to identify children who pose a possible risk with input from parents, educators, school resource officers, school counselors, and mental health professionals. We also suggest limiting access to guns by minors by restricting the purchase of some weapons until 21 while holding adults more responsible. Access prevention laws can reduce suicide and unintentional gun deaths and injuries among children. These are just a few suggestions.
One of the highest priorities we can have in American society is the safety and protection of children – and the people who teach them. Real lives, those of children and adults, are at stake in our schools. Schools must be safe zones for all students and teachers. This must be a priority.
This commentary was published earlier by the Tennessee Lookout, an affiliate of the nonprofit States Newsroom network, which includes the Florida Phoenix.
Jimbo99 says
This was quite effective in the moment.
https://news.yahoo.com/armed-civilian-neutralized-indiana-mall-214052652.html
Mental illness & access to a firearm needs to be addressed at the residence, long before the problem shows up at a school. I think it’s safe to assume that anyone showing up at a school, open carry with a rifle, handgun & ammunition needs to be neutralized on sight by school officers.
Cased items such as musical instruments, school officers should be allowed to search the casing at will & their discretion. Perhaps even TSA level searches at a special entrance to the school buildings as the only way anyone with what appears to be a cased musical instrument would be allowed to enter. Music students, identify their school ID’s & manage those little plastic items indicating they’re Music Program students. Any student scans that in that isn’t a music student with a cased item, that should be an alarm of sorts. If a mistake was made issuing an ID badge, rectify the ID badge immediately. Employees have secure access cards to get in & out of the office buildings. That goes way back & decades on the other side of last century. If a child is getting a schedule of courses for school prior to their 1st day of classes, they can get their ID badge at the same time.
As taxpayers, if we’re going to have to fund school officers, they might as well not have their hands tied to do anything about anyone that shows up to classes beyond being prepared to learn the subjects taught at schools. I can’t be the only one on planet Earth with this much common sense ? Enough with empowering the trauma that children would endure for having that level of security. The alternative is the trauma that children experience with an active shooter crisis. And if this too callous, so be it, we’ve all read the news stories of the kids arrested for threats. We also saw the 2 teen children in the FCSO video that had a firearm, that were discharging the firearm, as well as pointing the gun at passing motorists. Don’t even bring a toy gun or a bb gun either to a school. This way the rest of us won’t have to listen to Biden on the subject of what guns we’re allowed to have, for those of us that are just trying to protect ourselves from the lunatics that move in Anywhere, USA as a next door neighbor. Tired of hearing how precious children are and then the policies don’t support protecting the victims of a mass shooting. There really has to be a cost effective solution in all of this. Any parent not on board with this approach, well then maybe Flagler county isn’t the right location for them & their family.
Dave says
What if we took the money Biden is using for 87,000 new IRS agents and instead put them to guard our schools?
Seems like a better use of money
protonbeam says
You will never address mental health, it is a fantasy to think we can. We have spent decades teaching, telling and living the virtue that life is meaningless, and so for most, we must answer Camu’s ‘fundamental question’. But we are also so self absorbed in America we wont do it alone. All the while the absolute fact remains that the failed social engineering and graft for votes in the form of welfare and so many other programs that strip people of purpose and dignity have killed vast more people than my guns ever will.
MikeM says
Go to any big blue city. There are more deaths by students with illegal guns. Some of those teachers wish they could be armed. As far as mental health, reopen the asylums. To many people walking the streets belong in one. Stop coddling criminals , juvenile delinquents, and dangerous crazies. The pendulum is swinging the other way. The law abiding are getting tired of this. Better grab your snorkel, dems,. The big red wave is coming.
Kathryn says
Mental hospitals are not meant to be jails or punishments, and are no longer called “asylums” in this century. Your ignorance is on full display, as expected by a “red wave” advocate.