FEMA Offers Live and Web-Based School Emergency Preparedness Training for Free

While many people in the field of education are aware, we regularly run into school and public safety officials who do not realize that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) offers many excellent training opportunities relating to school safety at no cost.

FEMA offers live training on all – hazards school crisis planning at their training facility in Maryland and will even cover the costs of airfare, lodging and meals for attendees.  They also offer an array of free web courses relating to school crisis planning.

If you have not already done, so check out the excellent free resources by clicking on the link above.

Search Fails to Find Missing Girl, 12

Terre Haute, IN

Police in western Indiana continue looking for a 12-year-old girl after officers used tracking dogs and a helicopter to search for signs of her around her family’s home.

The Vigo County Sheriff’s Department says Alyssa Sedletzeck was last seen Sunday evening in her neighborhood along U.S. 41 just north of Terre Haute. Searchers spent several hours looking for her until nightfall Wednesday.

Great New Book on School Crisis Recovery – Reclaiming School in the Aftermath of Trauma – Advice Based on Experience

I have had the good fortune to co-author more than twenty books with a number of high caliber experts in the field like Gregory Thomas and Dr. Sonayia Shepherd.  I just received my copy of Reclaiming School in the Aftermath of Trauma – Advice Based on ExperienceThis excellent book was edited by Dr. Carolyn Lunsford Mears who is a superb writer and a joy to work with as an editor.  Dr. Mears is a much better writer than I am and did wonders with the quality of the chapter I contributed.

Dr. Mears and the other contributing authors did a wonderful job providing different perspectives to the topic of school mental health recovery for situations ranging from bullying to natural disasters, acts of terrorism to one of the most deadly school shootings in our nation’s history.  The book addresses school infrastructure recovery issues as well as school mental health recovery concerns.

For those who are interested in improving our ability to help students, staff and parents cope with tragedy, this awesome book is a must read.

Students Trying to Deal with Grief Relating to Teacher’s Murder in the Community Illustrates Situations School Officials Must Address

When sixth-grade teacher Tonawanda Thompson was shot and killed at her home in Connersville, Indiana, the violence had an impact at Fayette Central Elementary School even though the incident did not involve an act of school violence.  District grief counselors met with students from the school Tuesday morning after their teacher Tonawanda Thompson was shot and killed outside of her Richmond home.

Officers from the Richmond Police Department are investigating the tragic murder of the pregnant teacher while school officials try to help students and her colleagues deal with the pain of losing a valued member of the school community.  School officials often have to work to address acts of violence, accidents and other situations resulting in the deaths of students and staff away from school.  While such efforts are virtually unknown in many other countries where mental health services are rarely and sometimes never offered to students not only for these types of situations but even situations that occur on campus such as the terrorist attack on a school in Beslan, Russia which left hundreds of staff and students dead.

Mental health recovery efforts such as these are often well thought out and impressive in American schools.

 

Codes can Kill

For more than a decade now, the United States Department of Education, FEMA as well as many state departments of education, law enforcement and emergency management have been advising schools about the dangers of using codes such as “code yellow”, “code red”, “Mr. Smith and Wesson is in the Building” etc. to announce emergency protocols such as lockdowns.  This approach has proven to be dangerous because staff often get confused between the various codes even in schools that conduct monthly drills using codes.

During a recent school safety audit, we conducted approximately 200 crisis simulations with staff to measure how well staff could make decisions and communicate during life and death crisis situations.  This district uses color codes such as those described above and requires monthly emergency drills.  As we have seen with other school districts, school administrators as well as rank and file staff repeatedly became confused as to which code they should use when tasked with responding to video and scripted crisis scenarios.

It is important to remember how dire the consequences can be when a code is misunderstood.  For example, in this district, the confusion between a lockdown code and the code for severe weather sheltering could quickly result in a mass casualty event.

Though many schools still use this approach, we have seen a high fail rate during assessments as well as during actual emergency situations at schools.  We urge school officials to carefully reconsider this approach.  Please keep in mind that there is a dramatic difference between conducting a lockdown drill where a school administrator knows in advance that they will be conducting the drill and school employees facing a specific situation, making fast decisions and communicating with other staff.   

Missing Massachusetts Toddler Found in Dark Classroom

Police in Westport, Massachusetts are investigation to learn how a three year old child was left in a classroom at a day care center at the end of the day.  The child was found in the dark classroom at the end of the day during a search for the missing child.  This case illustrates how critical student supervision is to school safety.