Title: Threat Assessment
1One ESAs Role in Assessing Student Threats
Maureen T. Casey, Ph.D. Michael Cunningham
2Oregons Education Service Districts
Willamette ESD
3Willamette ESD Local Service Plan
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7Today, educators face two conflicting realities
- Violent crime at schools has dramatically
decreased in the last decademurder, assaults,
rapesare less than half of what they were in the
mid 1990s (source School Violence Facts Versus
Fears, Dewey Cornell, 2006)
- School shootings continue to occur and to
dominate the national consciousness and build a
climate of fear among educators, parents,
students and the general public.
8Since September of 2006, seven events
(2 in Wisconsin, 1 in Pennsylvania, 1 in
Colorado, 1 in Virginia, 1 in Ohio and 1 in
Illinois
- have reinforced this sense of vulnerability and
have raised the specter of violence being
committed not only by students but also by armed
adult intruders.
9West Nickel Mines School Nickel Mines,
Pennsylvania, October 2nd
Charles Roberts, 32, entered a tiny Amish school
(25 to 30 students) with a shotgun and a handgun,
killed five female students and himself.
10Platte Canyon High School Bailey, Colorado,
September 27th
Duane Morrison took six female high school
students hostage, molested them and later killed
Emily Keyes (age 16) and himself during a rescue
attempt by police. He had reportedly sat in the
parking lot and wandered the halls for 35 minutes
prior to taking students hostage.
11Weston High School Cazenovia, Wisconsin
September 29th
Fifteen year old Eric Hainstock, shot and killed
his principal, John Klang. He had told a friend
two days earlier that he didnt believe Mr. Klang
would make it through homecoming. Hainstock
reported being harassed by peers. After the
attack, another student noted that Hainstock
always used to kid around about bringing things
to school and hurting kids.
12East High School Green Bay, Wisconsin
September 15th
Shawn Sturtz, Bradley Netwal, William Cornell
were arrested when a fellow East High student
Matt Atkinson, alerted authorities that Cornell
and Sturtz were planning to execute a
Columbine-style attack at the high school.
13Virginia TechApril 16, 2007
- Seung-Hui Cho kills 32 and wounds 25
- more on the campus in Blacksburg
- before finally killing himself.
14SuccessTech Academy Cleveland, Ohio October 10,
2007 Fourteen year old Asa Coon shoots and
wounds two students and two teachers before
killing himself
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17 Center Elementary School Waycross, Georgia,
April 1, 2008
A group of third-graders plotted to attack their
teacher, bringing a broken steak knife,
handcuffs, duct tape and other items for the job
and assigning children tasks including covering
the windows and cleaning up afterward.
18There are many aspects to school safety and many
ways to address it
- Violence prevention curricula
- Strong anti-bullying programs
- A team approach to behavioral intervention with
challenging students - Intentional efforts to improve school climate
- Crime prevention through environmental design
(CPTED) assessments of school buildings - Emergency response plans that are designed and
tested with police and fire department
participation - Student threat assessment
19Our focus today is student threat assessment.
- Complicating Factors
- Threats are commonplace in schools
- Students typically do not act on the threats they
make - Those who do plan violent attacks dont often
threaten their victims beforehand
20The Challenge Facing Educators
- When to worry
- When not to worry
- How to intervene
21- Mid-Valley Student
- Threat Assessment System
- A regional, multi-agency approach for
- 21 school districts serving 80,000 students
- in three Oregon Counties (Marion, Polk
- and Yamhill).
-
22This system is designed to assess students at
risk for both targeted and reactive violence.
- Targeted violence can be defined as violence
directed against a specific target that is the
result of a cognitively based planning process. - Reactive violence can be defined as violence that
is an immediate, emotionally-based response to a
provocation or perceived threat.
- Since the vast majority of threats, aggression
and violence in schools are reactive in nature,
its important that a threat assessment system
address both types of violence.
23The Mid-Valley Student Threat Assessment System
- Developed in late 1999 and early 2000 under the
leadership of the Salem-Keizer School District - Soon after Salem-Keizer implemented the model in
its schools, the Willamette ESD implemented the
model in rural districts served by the Willamette
ESD - The system was the outcome of a multi-agency task
force effort that included representatives from
a host of agencies serving youth (law
enforcement, juvenile justice, mental health,
OYA, etc.)
24What spurred the work?
- Thurston and Columbine and the desire to keep
schools as safe as possible - The challenge to school districts posed by a
state legal requirement enacted after Thurston
and Columbine - Concerns about zero tolerance as a safety tool
25Oregon Revised Statute 339.250
- Requires administrators to notify parents of
students who are threatened directly or whose
names appear on a targeted list - Requires administrators to consider seeking a
mental health evaluation for students who
threaten or menace others at school
26The Challenge of ORS 339.250 for Oregon School
Districts
- It can lead to overreaction, with administrators
excluding students unnecessarily while they await
a mental health evaluation - A mental health evaluation is not an efficient or
effective way of assessing and managing risk
- takes too long
- doesnt address immediate safety concerns
- may or may not adequately address risk
- costly
- recommendations often too general
- limited school ownership of problem/solutions
27Concerns About Zero Tolerance
- While a zero tolerance policy may be effective as
a discipline tool, it is not entirely effective
as a risk management strategy. - Zero tolerance policies can be part of an
effective response to overt threats and
misbehavior but they wont be effective at
identifying students who may pose a threat but
who have not yet engaged in such overt behavior
(e.g. the student who writes a concerning
fictional essay in junior English).
28Concerns About Zero Tolerance
- Zero tolerance can lead to the exclusion of
students for accidental violations of policy
(e.g. the student in Minnesota who was expelled
this past spring break for buying her father a
souvenir Lord of the Rings sword while on a choir
trip in England). - Students excluded from school might still pose a
danger in a post-expulsion placement (note
nearly half the students assessed for threats are
special education students who, if excluded must
remain in some form of education placement).
29The model of threat assessment developed by the
multi-agency Task Force in 2000 was based on
several beliefs shared by members of the task
force
- While future violence might not be predictable,
the risk of violence can be assessed and managed - School violence is a school problem, but it also
is a community problem and schools and community
agencies should work together in assessing and
managing students and situations of concern - A two-stage model of school team screening and,
if necessary, follow up multi-agency assessment,
would help use outside agency resources more
efficiently. - The assessment system should address reactive
violence as well as targeted violence.
30In May, 2002, the Secret Service and the US
Department of Education issued two important
publications
31The Final Report of the Safe School Initiative
(listed key findings from the Secret Service
study of school shooters)
32The Safe Schools Initiative was a study conducted
by the U.S. Secret Service of 41 school shooters
involved in 37 school attacks between 1974-2000.
- Among the key findings of the study were the
following - There is no accurate or useful profile of school
shooters - Most shooters felt bullied or persecuted
- School shooters rarely acted impulsively instead
they planned their acts ahead of time - Shooters didnt threaten their targets directly,
but often leaked their intentions ahead of time
to other students, friends or siblings
33- Threat Assessment
- A Guide to Managing Threatening Situations and to
Creating Safe School Climates
34The Federal Guide
- Suggested a two-stage multi-agency model for
threat assessment that validated our approach - Led to a revision of our screening tool so that
it clearly included all of the essential
questions a team should address when
investigating a threat - Focused us on the importance of working to break
down the Code of Silence so that students would
be more likely to bring information about
dangerous situations to the attention of staff
35- Talking Points for Educators
- What is the code
- Why is it a problem
- Why break the code
- How to break it
(Poster and talking points available on our
website)
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46What a Law Enforcement Officer Brings to the
Level 2 Assessment Team
- Ability to identify whether a crime has been
committed - Ability to determine whether a student can be
arrested/detained, etc. - Access to information (criminal history, etc.)
- Ability to determine if scope of investigation
can be broadened (e.g. interviewing
students/family members/community members making
home visits obtaining search warrants, etc.) - A natural skepticism
47What a Mental Health Specialist Brings to the Team
- Ability to spot potential mental health issues
- Knowledge of appropriate mental health assessment
options and intervention strategies - Knowledge of community mental health resources
- Knowledge of how to obtain immediate mental
health intervention service (e.g.
hospitalization) if necessary
48What an Education Professional Trained in Threat
Assessment Brings to the Team
- Knowledge of schools
- A realistic sense of what interventions can work
in school settings - Knowledge of special education processes
- Ability to write a report that can be quickly
shared with appropriate school staff
49The role of the educator on the threat
assessment team is filled by the Willamette
Education Service District when the team responds
to any of our twentyrural school districts
50What circumstances have led schools in our region
to do threat screenings and request assessments?
- When a student is arrested for weapons
possession, assault, menacing or harassment, at
school or in the community - When a student brings or has a weapon at school
- When information is received that a student may
be planning to attack one or more students or
staff members at school - When a student has directly threatened another
student or staff member or has a targeted list - When a physical attack by a student did or could
have resulted in serious injury to a another
student or staff member
51What circumstances have led schools in our region
to do threat screenings and request assessments?
- When a physical or verbal conflict between
students is unresolved - When students or staff members report being
fearful of a particular student - When a student displays a high level of anger
clearly inappropriate to a given provocation or
event - When a student expresses violent ideation in
verbal speech or writing - When a student justifies the use of his own
aggression or violence to solve a problem - When a student displays an escalating pattern of
aggressive/violent behavior
52Level 2 Threat AssessmentsRural Marion and Polk
Co. (3/01- 6/08) Yamhill Co. (9/05- 6/08)
53- 3 out of every 5 cases involved the issuance of a
threat - 1 out of every 4 cases involved a disturbing act
- 1 out of every 8 cases involved bringing a weapon
to school - In 1 of every 5 of the above assessments, a
student was assessed at medium to high risk for
targeted violence - In nearly half of the above assessments students
were assessed medium to high risk for reactive
violence
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55Mid-Valley Student Threat Assessment Team (STAT)
Survey ResultsSchool Administrators
- 94 stated STAT effectively identified
potentially dangerous students - 94 stated STAT had positive effects on school
safety - 95 stated STAT provided information necessary
for support, discipline, and placement decisions - 95 stated STAT fulfills a valuable and important
role in schools - 90 reported STAT increased efficient
coordination with law enforcement and mental
health
56Threat Assessment Case 1 Eddie
- A junior in high school
- While riding the bus home one day in
mid-November, a male peer on the bus made the
comment to him that he looks like a guy who could
bring a gun to school and shoot people. Eddie
retorted that he was and that the peer would be
the first on his hit list. - The next day at school Eddie reportedly made
similar remarks to other students who had been
harassing him, telling them that they were also
on his hit list. - When the school administrator spoke with Eddie,
Eddie admitted making threats, stating that he
was hassled by some peers but that he wouldnt
actually hurt anyone.
57What action might a school administrator take?
- What actually happened
- Eddie was suspended (in-school) pending a Level I
screening which took place that afternoon.
58Information about Eddie shared at the screening
from school staff and parents
- at the school for 2 months
- has a mix of mainstream and resource classes but
has few school credits - came from a locked treatment facility due to
self-injurious behavior and suicidal ideation - history of past abuse and some delinquency (not
recent) - ED and AD/HD
- Taking medication for depression
- often harassed at school
- generally isolated, especially at lunch or other
free times - In two of his resource room classes Eddie jokes
and appears at ease - He has positive interactions with the resource
room teacher - mainstream teachers observe that he is often
sleepy and inattentive and his history and
English teachers believe he will be failing by
the end of the semester - Eddie can be defensive and has lashed out
verbally to staff on two occasions and then has
backed off - rides the bus on some days but walks home (3
miles) when the weather is dry - Eddie lives with his father and stays in regular
contact with his mother who has remarried - Eddies father has removed guns from the home and
the stepfather keeps his guns locked with ammo
locked in separate containers - Eddie sees a counselor on a weekly basis
59Given this information, what decision might the
Level 1 Screening Team make regarding whether or
not to call the Student Threat Assessment Team
for a Level 2 Assessment?
- What actually happened
- The screening team called for a level 2
assessment which occurred the following day.
60Additional Information Provided at Level 2
Assessment
- The team discussed and identified Agitators
(factors which increase the likelihood of threats
and violence) for Eddie, which included
harassment by peers, unstructured time and space,
large classrooms with a lot of book work and
being challenged directly by a staff member. - The team discussed and identified Inhibitors
(factors which decrease the likelihood of threats
and violence) include using his hands, working
with small engines, physical activity, doing
chores that earn him money, art class, ERC
classes, watching TV, and playing with his baby
brother.
61What level of risk was assigned to Eddie
regarding targeted violence?
The team concluded that the risk of targeted
violence was low (at that time).
What about reactive violence?
The team concluded that the risk of reactive
violence was at a moderate level.
62- What management/supervision strategies were
recommended for both home and school?
63Recommendations for home
- remove weapons from mother and stepfathers
house - take Eddie to physician for review of medication
in light of his chronic tiredness at school - in conversation with Eddie, support schools
safety interventions, which follow.
64Recommendations for school
- school administration should require a no-threat,
no-harm contract as part of Eddies return - school should provide a daily mentoring/
confidante relationship for Eddie (resource room
teacher is the logical choice for this role) - assistant principal and resource room teacher
should intervene with peers who target Eddie to
eliminate or reduce harassment - Eddie should ride in the front of the bus on days
he chooses to ride bus driver should report any
instances of harassment to school officials - Eddie should have opportunities to connect with
staff or peers through activity options during
free time (e.g. work or read in library, do
office jobs for secretary, work in the cafeteria,
etc.) - school counselor should communicate with outside
counselor for consultation and coordination - school should consider, if feasible, paid work
experience for Eddie at the high school, another
district building or in community.
65Case Outcome
- Eddie had a successful remainder of the year. No
new incidents. - He worked in the cafeteria, developed a couple of
friendships, and passed all his classes.
66Threat Assessment Case Study 2Steven
- A senior in high school
- On a Thursday, he brought a weapon to school,
and, in his car, showed it to his girlfriend and
said, You make me hate life. The girlfriend
called Stevens mother who retrieved the weapon
from the car. - That evening, Steven followed the girlfriend and
two female peers as they were driving toward a
nearby city. Steven chased down and forced the
girlfriends car to stop and tried to grab her
from her vehicle. When he discovered one his
girlfriends peers had called 911, he threatened
to kill himself and the left the scene. - The responding officer interviewed the girlfriend
and discovered that Steven had brought a gun to
school that day. - Steven was arrested that evening and taken into
custody. - The superintendent of the school district was
contacted.
67What action might the school administrator take
at this juncture?
What actually Happened
- School Administrator contacted the Student Threat
Assessment Team Friday morning. -
- Plan was made to collapse the level 1 screening
and the level 2 assessment into one meeting which
took place Friday afternoon.
68Information about Steven shared at the assessment
from school staff, parents, school resource
officer, and juvenile department probation officer
- Within the previous week, Steven had shown the
girlfriend the gun while they were driving and
had stated that there was a bullet for her and
her previous boyfriend if the girlfriend were to
cheat on him with this previous boyfriend. - Within the previous month, Steven has made
suicidal threats. He has been observed being
physically controlling of girlfriend on several
occasions. - Steven has an explosive temper and a long history
of defiant and physically aggressive behavior. - He had previously been on probation due to an
assault in his sophomore year on two middle
school boys on a school bus. - Stevens recent behavior is seen by parents and
others as escalated in the past month.
69- He was physically and emotionally abused in the
first seven years of his life by his mothers
previous husband, who was abusive to her as well.
- Stevens mother is concerned that her son is
displaying behavior similar to that of this
ex-husband. - Stevens stepfather believes that the team is
overreacting to the situation and that there was
no chance Steven would actually use the weapon. - There are weapons in the home, all of which are
now locked up. - Steven is in an alternative program, due to poor
performance and dissatisfaction with regular
program. He has a few friends, but many other
peers at school steer clear of him. Steven speeds
when driving, especially when angry. - Steven works at a local gas station, a job which
he has liked and at which he has performed well.
Steven has a positive relationship with the
school resource officer and made some efforts
this past fall to control his emotions in school
and classroom settings. He will be recommended
for expulsion for bringing the firearm to school.
70Situational Variables
- Stressors (factors which increase the likelihood
of threats or violence) include Stevens
conflicts with girlfriend and other peers and
being explicitly confronted by an authority
figure about misbehavior. -
- Inhibitors (factors which decrease the likelihood
of threats and violence) include working and
interactions with positive and familiar adults
when they are not confronting him.
71What level of risk was assigned to Steven
regarding targeted violence? What about reactive
violence?
- While in custody in the juvenile detention
center, Stevens risk for both targeted and
reactive violence is low. - If released at this time, risk to others of
targeted violence would appear high. Threats were
direct and plausible, targets were identified,
some planning and preparation were evident.
Stressors likely will intensify (loss of
girlfriend, loss of school placement, likely loss
of job). Risk to others of affective or reactive
violence (threats, physical acting out or
aggression) would also appear high, given
Stevens behavioral history and recent incidents.
72What management strategies were recommended?
Steven is currently in the physical custody of
the county Juvenile Department. The probation
officer will, based on this threat assessment,
recommend to the judge that Steven remain in
custody at least until a psychological evaluation
has been completed. Once the court determines
the disposition of his case, a follow-up threat
assessment should be conducted shortly before
Stevens release to the community. At that time,
recommendations for safety planning for school,
home and community can be made that will be
informed by new evaluation information and by
court planning and support.
73Case Outcome
- Steven was court ordered to remain in detention
until he successfully completed a program for
youth displaying behavior consistent with that of
domestic violence perpetrators. - He was not allowed to return to his home
community and was placed with relatives in a
different community setting. - He was restrained for any contact with his
ex-girlfriend and successfully completed an
alternative high school education program.
74Advantages of the Mid-Valley Student Threat
Assessment System
- Its fast. School teams typically conduct Level
One screenings the same day of the threatening or
violent incident. This allows them the ability to
make a safety plan quickly and to decide if a
Level Two assessment by three members of the
Student T.A. team is needed. The Level Two
Assessment team typically comes out to the school
within one to three days of the event, conducts a
risk assessment and provides the school teams
with recommendations about safety planning and
about next steps. - The presence of an outside team reduces potential
conflict between a school and the parent of the
student who has threatened or harmed someone. - The process actually keeps many students in
school who might otherwise be removed. Nearly 80
of those assessed remain in school or return
after a brief period of suspension.
75Advantages of the Mid-Valley Student Threat
Assessment System
- The process helps insure that students who are
at-risk for either targeted or reactive violence
receive the proper interventions to reduce that
risk, whether they are removed from mainstream
school settings or not. - The process reduces liability for school
districts due to its multi-agency nature and due
to the fact that it is aligned with the federal
Threat Assessment in Schools guide published by
the U.S. Dept. of Ed. and the U.S. Secret Service
in 2002. - Most importantly, the process, due to its ability
to help schools assess and manage risk, actually
helps make schools safer places.
76By collecting information from many sources
teachers, other staff, parents and students and
then considering the information in a systematic
way
A school teamand, when necessary, a multi-agency
teamcan put the puzzle pieces together to get a
clear picture of whats going on so the team can
generate an effective intervention strategy to
keep the school safe for everyone.
77Education Service Agencies are uniquely qualified
to Support Student Threat Assessment Systems
- ESAs can form and maintain relationships with
other key regional partners (law enforcement,
mental health and juvenile justice) - Economy of scale (both in terms of cost and
expertise) - ESAs can respond quickly due to greater
flexibility in staffing - ESAs can provide systematic screening training to
school teams across a region - Ease of cost sharing
78Suggested Steps for ESAs in Helping to
ImplementA Regional Threat Assessment Model
- Decide, internally, if you want to support the
creation of a threat assessment system for
districts in your region (it takes time, energy
and resources to get a system off the ground) - Determine, through discussions with your school
districts, what is the level of need for and
interest in developing such a system -
- Form a work group of educatorsboth from the the
ESA and from school districtsand of community
agency professionals from law enforcement, public
mental health, juvenile, and other interested
agencies serving youth - In the work group, discuss how schools and
agencies could partner in a school-based threat
assessment effort. (Try and recruit educators and
agency professionals who are opinion leaders in
their own organizations and who are boundary
spannerspeople who arent overly territorial and
who can think a little out of the box)
79Suggested Steps for ESAs in Helping to
ImplementA Regional Threat Assessment Model
- Study the federal guide (Threat Assessment in
Schools), examine existing models, discuss your
local resources and limitations, and then map out
a proposed system, relying as much as possible on
in-kind efforts in order to reduce new dollar
costs. - Subject your proposed system to close scrutiny
and then refine it. - Establish a proposed implementation timeline that
allows adequate time for agency approvals, any
MOUs, training of key staff, orientation of all
staff, etc.
80Suggested Steps for ESAs in Helping to
ImplementA Regional Threat Assessment Model
- Present your proposed system and its rationales
to school district superintendents and agency
decision-makers to obtain approval to proceed. - Seek grant monies to help reduce start-up costs
but dont depend on grant money in order to
implement your system. - Train key personnelfirst the members of the
assessment team and then school administrators
and counselors who will participate in
screenings. - Orient all staff members, and get going!