Title: EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS FOR SCHOOLS
1EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESSFOR SCHOOLS
2STATISTICS
- Sophomore Views on ViolenceTexas A M survey of
1,004 tenth graders - 34 of students reported having been threatened
with bodily harm at school or on a school bus - 15 claimed they had something taken from them by
force or threat of bodily harm - 14 said they had been physically attacked
3Statistics
- Sophomore Views
- 50 of boys and 28 of girls were in at least one
fight during the previous year - More than 20 said that threatening to use a
weapon would help prevent fights - Nearly 17 thought acting tough would deter
altercations.
4statistics
- School Violence Statistics
- 37 of students dont feel safe in school
- 20 avoid hallways
- 43 avoid restrooms
- 25 of girls 49 of boys reported being
physically assaulted - continued
5statistics
- School Violence Statistics
- 63 of students say they would learn more if they
felt more safe at school - 81 of students say they would be happier if they
felt safe at school - Kids skip school at least one day every month
because they are afraid to go to class
6A passive victim can be one of the most dangerous
children you have to deal with!
7VIDEO GAMES
8Violence Breeds Violence
9Retards the Brain
10How Did We Get Here?
- In every school shooting, the shooter told
someone what he/she intended to do - Every school shooter advised someone else of
their intentions - There is no school shooter profile
- Society demands that something be done
11PLANGoals for Violence Prevention Response Plan
- Prepare school, family community members to
identify the behavioral emotional signs of
trouble - Prepare all with what to do when a child is
identified - Determine how school community resources can be
used to create safe responsive schools service
systems to address troubled youth violent acts
12Early Warning Signs
- Social withdrawal
- Excessive feelings of isolation
- Excessive feelings of rejection
- Being a victim of violence
- Feeling of being picked on/persecuted
- Low school interest poor academics
- Expressions of violence in writing, etc.
- Uncontrolled anger
- Intolerance for differences and prejudice
13Early Warning Signs
- Patterns of impulsive chronic hitting,
- intimidating, bullying behaviors
- History of discipline problems
- History of violent aggressive behavior
- Drug alcohol use
- Affiliation with gangs
- Inappropriate access to possession of use of
firearms - Serious threats of violence
14prevention
- TRADITIONAL WARNING SIGNS
- EARLY INTERVENTION PHILOSOPHY
- TONE (CLIMATE OF SCHOOL)
- DAY-TO-DAY SECURITY
- PROACTIVE MANAGEMENT
- RISK VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT
15Imminent Warning Signs
- Progressive patterns that may include
- Serious violent fighting with peers family
- Severe destruction of property
- Severe rage for seemingly minor reasons
- Detailed threats of lethal violence
- Possession/use of firearms and other weapons
- Self-injurious behaviors or threats/attempts at
suicide
16When a Crisis Strikes
- Assess life safety issues immediately.
- Provide immediate emergency care.
- Call 911 notify police/rescue first. Call the
superintendent second. - Convene the crisis team to assess the situation
and implement the crisis response procedures. - Evaluate available needed resources
17When a Crisis Strikes...
- Adjust the bell schedule to ensure safety during
the crisis. - Alert people in charge of various information
systems to prevent confusion misinformation.
Notify parents. - Contact appropriate community agencies the
school districts public information office. - Implement post-crisis procedures
18In the Aftermath of a Crisis
- Help parents understand their childrens reaction
to violence. - Help staff deal with their reactions.
- Help students faculty adjust.
- Help victims family members re-enter the school
environment. - Help students teachers address the return of a
previously removed student.
19CONSEQUENCES OF MAJOR EMERGENCIES
- THE INSTANT PROBLEM
- PUBLIC RELATIONS
- POLITICAL
- MORALE
- CONTINUING TENSION
- BUDGET
- LEGAL PROBLEMS
20LESSONS LEARNED
- THREE PRINCIPLES
- PREVENTION
- PREPAREDNESS
- LEADERSHIP
- IT CAN HAPPEN HERE
- ITS NOT OVER WHEN ITS OVER
- EVENT AND COVERAGE ARE INTERACTIVE
- POSTMAN DOESNT RING TWICE
- PRE-EVENT TONE MAY DETERMINE EXTENT OF THE
VIOLENCE
21Public information
- GENERAL POLICY VS EMERGENCIES
- WHO AUTHORIZES
- TIMING
- RUMOR CONTROL
- ONE CHANNEL OUT
- TO WHOM-MEDIA, STAFF, STUDENTS, FAMILIES,
COMMUNITIES
22Where to Begin?
- Create the Foundation
- Form the Team
- Develop the Plan
23Create the Foundation
- A Responsive School
- Ensures high academic behavioral standards
- Has a caring supportive staff that connects to
each child - Finds solves school problems
- Involves the family links with the whole
community - Shares issues among all
24Foundation for Safe, Responsive Schools
- Treat ALL students families with equal respect
- Ensure ways for students to share safety concerns
- Ensure safe, confidential ways for students to
express their needs, fears, anxieties to caring
adults - Protect against abuse neglect
- Reduce risk behaviors w/ extended day programs
- Coordinate tailor services to prevent too
little too late - REGULARLY EVALUATE RESULTS
25Create the Foundation for a Safe School
Environment
- Strong leadership
- Caring faculty
- Parent community involvement
- Student participation in design
- Interventions based on careful assessment
setting measurable goals - Research based prevention intervention
- Access to quality team consultation
26Create the Foundation for a Safe School
Environment
- Policies that support responsible behavior
- Community-developed code of conduct
- Negative consequences only within positive
reinforcing environment - Zero tolerance for guns zero reject from
educational opportunity for all
27Create the Foundation for a Safe School
Environment
- Schools physical environment is evaluated
monitored - Everyone is responsible
- Class size is small
- Campus is closed for lunch
- Dismissal is staggered
- Community police are welcome and services are
coordinated - After school programs
28Principles for UsingEarly Warning Signs
- DO NO HARM
- Understand the context
- -- developmental
- -- school, home community
- Avoid stereotypes
- Look for multiple, not singular warning signs
- AVOID MISINTERPRETATION
29procedure
- INITIAL REPORT
- NOTIFICATION
- SECURE
- TRIAGE
- IDENTIFY
- NOTIFICATION II
- COLLECT
- TRAIN
30INITIAL REPORT
- WHO REPORTED THE EMERGENCY
- WHAT IS THE EMERGENCY
- WHERE IS THE EMERGENCY
- WEAPONS (if known)
- INJURIES (if known)
31notification
- 9-1-1
- PRINCIPAL
- ALL SCHOOL ANNOUNCEMENT
- SCHOOL NURSE-MEDICAL
- SUPERINTENDENT
32SECURE
- SECURE OR EVACUATE
- ASSEMBLE
- ACCOUNTABILITY
33TRIAGE
- SET UP PRE-DESIGNATED TRIAGE (if applicable)
- MEDICAL ASSISTANCE
- TRANSPORT
- TRACK LOCATION OF MOVEMENT
34IDENTIFY
- EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTER
- (COMMAND POST)
- MEDIA STAGING AREA
- REUNIFICATION AREA
35NOTIFICATION II
- SCHOOL CRISIS RESPONSE TEAM
- CRITICAL INCIDENT STRESS MANAGEMENT TEAM
- NEBRASKA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OFFICE OF SCHOOL
SAFETY
36COLLECT
- REPORTS
- STUDENTS
- STAFF
- VOLUNTEERS
- REVIEW ALL DOCUMENTS
37TRAIN
- DETERMINE TRAINING NEEDS
- SELF AUDIT
- TRAINING SCHEDULE
- DRILLS
38RE-ENTRY
- CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATION
- INFORM ALL STAFF IN DETAIL
- INFORM STUDENTS FAMILIES
- HAVE CRISIS RESPONSE TEAMS ON SITE AND AVAILABLE
39VIDEO
40Summary
- Behaviors to Look For
- angry outbursts
- excessive fighting bullying
- cruelty to animals
- fire setting
- frequent behavior problems at school
- frequent problems in the neighborhood
- lack of friends
- alcohol / drug use
- lack of academic progress
41NEBRASKA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
- LELA LOWRY
- SCHOOL SAFETY PROGRAM SPECIALIST
- 301 CENTENNIAL MALL SOUTH
- PO BOX 94987
- LINCOLN, NEBRASKA 68509-4987
- 402-471-1925
- Lela.lowry_at_nde.ne.gov
- www.nde.state.ne.us/safety