Parents PLUS Schools Can Complete the 1-2 Punch for School Safety

School districts that work with parents to share safety planning for any potential man-made or natural disaster provide the best one-two punch against potential threats. School officials view children's safety from inside a school’s four walls and parents provide the complementary outside view. (Courtesy of PWPORG)

Initially Published in PWPORG, by Katherine Schweit, J.D., CCEP, Attorney, Author, and retired FBI Special Agent who Created FBI’s Active Shooter Program

In my monthly newsletter, I deliberately focus on the largest issues: those that present an emergent threat, those that signal a need for new or enforced legislation, and those related to desperately needed research.

Katherine Schweit Honored in 2022 'ASTORS' Homeland Security Awards Program
Katherine Schweit was Recognized in 2022 ‘ASTORS’ Homeland Security Awards Program

When the school year is underway, I know thoughts turn to the moment, but I urge those in charge to evaluate the overall quality of a program.

Evaluating school preparedness can be done whether you are a school board member, administrator, teacher, or parent.

My sure-fire first step is to ask whether they could answer yes to these seven test questions.

I say, be honest and don’t answer yes if what you have is just window dressing.

  • Does your school and district have a comprehensive and written plan on what school safety means, including physical security aspects and changes that need to be made?

  • Do you know what a threat assessment team is, and do you have a functioning one?

Firearms-related incidents kill more than 45,000 people in the US every year and are the leading cause of death for US children and adolescents. But talking about guns doesn't have to be scary or divisive. With this easy-to-read and politics-free guide, you can arm yourself with the facts and strategies to calmly discuss firearms laws, firearms ownership, court decisions, and the Founding Fathers’ thinking behind the Second Amendment. (Courtesy of Katherine Schweit)
Firearms-related incidents kill more than 45,000 people in the US every year and are the leading cause of death for US children and adolescents. But talking about guns doesn’t have to be scary or divisive. With this easy-to-read and politics-free guide, you can arm yourself with the facts and strategies to calmly discuss firearms laws, firearms ownership, court decisions, and the Founding Fathers’ thinking behind the Second Amendment. (Courtesy of Katherine Schweit)
  • Do your students, parents, faculty, and staff know who to report concerns to, including access to an anonymous reporting system?

  • Is it properly and repeatedly advertised in schools and the community?

  • Do you regularly share with students and your community signs to report of individuals who may be under duress, on a pathway to commit suicide, or worse?

  • Do you invite law enforcement and other federal, state, and local agencies to evaluate your school safety plan so they know what to do in an emergency?

  • Do you have a critical response team who will work with first responders no matter the emergency to ensure they have access to utility cut-offs, school diagrams, keys, and information on staff and students?

  • Do you train and run drills several times yearly to give faculty, staff, and students the confidence to respond immediately during an emergency?

I’ve heard feedback that this test produces a worse score than expected.

That’s OK. Remember these large undertakings; any step toward safety is a good step forward.

To improve a district test score. Consider dividing these efforts among others, asking who can take the lead.

Include the school resource officers, parent/teacher groups, and local civic groups if available.

Many resources, including my newsletter and podcast, are available to help understand what behaviors of concern should be reported to the school, law enforcement, and anonymous reporting systems.

Your school counselor or county mental health providers might be able to shed light on good information to share.

(In this episode of Police1’s Policing Matters podcast, host Jim Dudley speaks with returning guest Katherine Schweit about new commonalities and trends in active shooter incidents. Courtesy of Police1 and YouTube. Posted on Feb 24, 2023.)

Last year, I shared how one of the larger challenges looming is to talk to children about targeted violence and train students. It’s natural for adults to want to protect children, and sometimes that means keeping information from them.

But students today are aware that school shootings can occur, and silence just adds to their stress.

Instead, I urge each district to work with school resource officers to run non-scary but informative drills for the students and staff three times a year.

Many schools mandate some version of active shooter safety training, but often, parents are unaware of the training content.

The schools don’t share the content with parents, mistakenly believing that school safety details are somehow secret.

I’m not suggesting that schools disclose building blueprints, locking codes, and extensive details of their run, hide, and fight plans, but there is a middle ground.

Share with parents what you are telling the children and provide them with fact-based talking points to discuss concerns, while reducing their stress and the anxiety a child may begin to feel.

Stop the Killing can help you transform the way you take control of your safety. This book provides you the keys to take action on what you can do to stop the mass shooting crisis in America. (Courtesy of Katherine Schweit)
Stop the Killing can help you transform the way you take control of your safety. This book provides you the keys to take action on what you can do to stop the mass shooting crisis in America. (Courtesy of Katherine Schweit)

Training children in safety shouldn’t involve scaring them. Of course not.

Training doesn’t mean traumatizing.

People who think so perhaps misunderstand what good training for children looks like. They fear children will be scared by the sound of gunshots, the sight of blood, and people running.

We don’t train children to avoid streets by showing them pictures of mangled children run over by cars.

Teachers know how to use age-appropriate language to inform and educate without creating fear.

Training children focus on their behavior, empowering them to participate in their own safety.

My co-podcaster, Sarah Ferris, was very much against training children when we began our first season of Stop the Killing podcast, but she has quite changed her mind.

In each episode, we discuss a shooting, what went wrong, what signs were missed about the shooter, and how we can all be better prepared.

Sarah came to appreciate that training for the scariest but rare occurrence of targeted violence is more about teaching children to follow directions immediately and listen, be quiet, be brave when they are scared, and even move to safety if they are in a dangerous place.

Isn’t this the same checklist of training tools adults use to prepare children to respond when there is a fire, lightning storm, or even a tornado?

The message to children is all the same: listen to the adults around you, follow directions, and get to a safe location.

One often overlooked benefit to training is the opportunity to assure children about the rare nature of school shootings.

We tell children that fires and tornadoes are rare, but it is wise to be prepared just in case.

Continue reading on PWPORG… Page 8

About the Author

Katherine Schweit is an attorney and retired FBI special agent who created and led the FBI’s active shooter program after the horrible tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Katherine Schweit, former head of the FBI’s active shooter program speaks with 'ASTORS' Attendees and autographs copies of 'STOP THE KILLING: How to End the Mass Shooting Crisis.'
Katherine Schweit, former head of the FBI’s active shooter program, speaks with 2022 ‘ASTORS’ Attendees and autographs copies of ‘STOP THE KILLING: How to End the Mass Shooting Crisis.’

She joined a White House team working on violence prevention matters led by then–Vice President Biden.

She is the author of Stop the Killing: How to End the Mass Shooting Crisis and How to Talk About Guns with Anybody, and hosts a podcast in its 4th season called Stop the Killing.

Bookending her time at the FBI, Ms. Schweit worked as an assistant state’s attorney in Chicago and the director of security training for a Fortune 300 company.

Ms. Schweit brings these public/private best practices to her consulting business, Schweit Consulting, which spans from Fortune 100 companies to small private schools to the government of New Zealand.

(Security Consultant & Former FBI Special Agent Executive Katherine Schweit Discusses the Shooting at Michigan State University. Courtesy of WGN9 and YouTube. Posted on Feb 14, 2023.)

Schweit is the author of the FBI’s seminal research on mass shootings, “A Study of 160 Active Shooter Incidents in the United States Between 2000 and 2013,” and was part of the crisis team responding to shooting incidents at the Holocaust Memorial Museum, the Pentagon, and the Navy Yard in the Washington, DC, area.

She shares free best practices and research through her website and regular newsletter at katherineschweit.com. A one-time print journalist, she has published extensively, including opinion pieces in the New York Times and Chicago’s Daily Herald.

Schweit was also an executive producer on the award-winning film “The Coming Storm,” widely used in security and law enforcement training throughout the United States and by the U.S. State Department worldwide, and earned a second U.S. Attorney General’s Outstanding Contributions award for this work.

(This moving and thought-provoking film draws from real-life active shooter incidents. It is a unique training tool for law enforcement, paramedics, fire, and other first responders. Courtesy of the FBI, St. Thomas University, and YouTube. Posted on Feb 15, 2018.)

As a recognized expert in mass shooting and active shooter matters, crisis response, workplace violence, and corporate security policies, Schweit is often asked to provide on-air television commentary when tragedy occurs, and she regularly speaks to professional, government, and private organizations.

Katherine Schweit, former head of the FBI’s active shooter program speaks with 'ASTORS' Attendees and autographs complimentary copies of 'STOP THE KILLING: How to End the Mass Shooting Crisis,' courtesy of 2022 'ASTORS' Awards Sponsors NEC National Security Systems (NSS), ATI Systems, Automatic Systems of America, guardDog AI, Fortior Solutions, IPVideo Corporation, Rajant Corporation, RX Global, and SIMS Software!
Katherine Schweit autographs complimentary copies of ‘STOP THE KILLING: How to End the Mass Shooting Crisis,’ courtesy of 2022 ‘ASTORS’ Awards Sponsors NEC National Security Systems (NSS), ATI Systems, Automatic Systems of America, guardDog AI, Fortior Solutions, IPVideo Corporation, Rajant Corporation, RX Global, and SIMS Software!

She is a member of the Association of Threat Assessment Professionals, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the International Association for Healthcare Security and Safety, the local and national chapters of societies supporting retired FBI Special Agents.

Schweit is also an adjunct faculty at DePaul University College of Law and Webster University, has two daughters, and lives in Northern Virginia, outside of Washington, DC.

She can be reached through schweitconsulting.com.

Learn more…

Sign up for Katherine’s newsletter to learn what actions you can take to stop the killings, at www.katherineschweit.com/newsletter.

Listen to Katherine’s FREE ‘STOP THE KILLING’ Podcasts wherever you listen, and help get the message out by sharing the podcasts with your friends and family, at https://www.katherineschweit.com/podcast.

Courtesy of Katherine Schweit stop the killing
Courtesy of Katherine Schweit

Reprinted with permission courtesy of PWPORG.

PWPORG has launched Parents With Preparedness Magazine Edition Nine, a FREE digital magazine filled with commonsense strategies, powerful interviews, authoritative articles, life stories, and resources to inform the dialogue and share best practices about preparedness and resiliency for families and communities.

 

Be a Superhero, Make a Donation, and Make a Difference

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How to Get Involved, Be a Superhero, Make a Donation and Make a Difference –
PWPORG is seeking charitable, donations, contributions, and corporate/agency sponsorships to provide Safety and Emergency Preparedness Training to children’s groups in your community.

PWPORG, which was Recognized for ‘Excellence in Public Safety & Community Enrichment’ in the 2022 ‘ASTORS’ Awards Program, and its award-winning Preparedness Publications for Children, Families, and Communities, are authored and created 100 percent by volunteers, and are dependent on charitable donations, contributions, and corporate/agency sponsorships to provide Safety and Emergency Preparedness Training to children’s groups in your community.

Please consider taking action to provide educational resources to kids, their families, and their communities today.

Parents With Preparedness
Parents With Preparedness Edition 7 (Courtesy of PWPORG)

Every donation will make a difference, and all donations go towards developing new children’s books, parental resources, and educational content.

Become an ‘author of change’ that can forever enhance the life of a child!

Visit pwporg.org/contribute.

Are you a parent, caregiver, first responder, or educator who would like to contribute your experience, strength, hope, and expertise to an upcoming edition of Parents With Preparedness magazine?

Visit pwporg.org/contribute and sign up to be ‘an author’ of change!

Katherine Schweit Honored in 2022 ‘ASTORS’ Homeland Security Awards Program

Katherine Schweit, Retired FBI Special Agent, former head of the FBI’s Active Shooter Program, and author of ‘STOP THE KILLING: How to End the Mass Shooting Crisis‘ accepts her 2022 'ASTORS' Award for Excellence in Public Safety & Community Resilience.
Katherine Schweit, Retired FBI Special Agent, former head of the FBI’s Active Shooter Program, and author of ‘STOP THE KILLING: How to End the Mass Shooting Crisis‘ accepts her 2022 ‘ASTORS’ Award for Excellence in Public Safety & Community Resilience.

American Security, Today’s Annual ‘ASTORS’ Awards, is the preeminent U.S. Homeland Security Awards Program, and now in its Eighth Year, continues to recognize industry leaders of Physical and Border Security, Cybersecurity, Emergency Preparedness – Management and Response, Law Enforcement, First Responders as well as federal, state and municipal government agencies in the acknowledgment of their outstanding efforts to Keep our Nation Secure.