Over the upcoming days, weeks
and months there will be considerable hand wringing, finger pointing and second
guessing when it comes to analyzing the tragedy of last week. There is little positive to come from this. The
school was attacked by an irrational actor with a mission and no exit
strategy. A perfect storm of
unmitigated evil.
In my education leadership
career, I do have some unique experience and expertise in school security. Here are some things that I recommend
you should do to review your campus security procedures and practices,
today. This checklist is quick,
practical, reasonable and actionable.
1. Keep your exterior doors and
windows secured at all times. This may mean that locks need to be replaced and
keys need to be inventoried and redistributed. This should have been done before, do it now. Stop the practice of people propping
doors open when they go outside.
Remind staff and students constantly the seriousness of exterior door
safety. Be diligent in modeling and monitoring this practice and dealing with
those that forget and break protocol.
2. Review and practice alert,
evacuation, and shelter-in-place procedures, regularly (and not just on the
last day of the month). Immediately stop the practice of warning staff when
there is going to be a drill. It
defeats the purpose of the drill and creates the learned behavior of “checking
to see if it is a real emergency.” Also, there should be drills conducted on
days when campus leadership is not available. Emergencies can occur at any time. Practice accordingly.
3. Keep your head on a swivel. Stay alert. When it comes to their surroundings, most adults operate in
a fog throughout the day. This is where you can actually use students to help
with security. They are much more
alert than we give them credit for.
Teach them to monitor our shared surroundings (visitor badges, unlocked doors,
open windows, damaged equipment, unsafe conditions, etc.) and quietly report to
their teacher. Make it a game.
4. When something seems off,
listen to your gut. If you gut is
wrong, all you did was take an extra precaution. If your gut is right, you prevented or reduced the severity
of a difficult situation.
5. Plan for the worst. Pray for
the best. We should not turn our campuses into armed camps and we cannot live in
fear. But we should be prudent and
take reasonable precautions.
This is a sad time to be an educator. But this is also a proud time. Without a moments hesitation our peers paid
the ultimate price to protect our children. We will not forget that. And in the
face of fear and uncertainty, the rest of us manned our posts yesterday because
the job is important and it is what we do. We Are Teachers.
Think. Work. Achieve.
Your turn...
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/Fundamental5
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “Look at Me: A Cautionary School Leadership Tale” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/lookatmebook
- Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Plans (Fundamental 5 Lesson Plan Tool); PW Lite (Basic PowerWalks Tool); PW Pro (Mid-level PowerWalks Tool)
- Upcoming Presentations: North Dakota Principals Association Conference (Keynote Speaker), TASSP Assistant Principals’ Workshop (Featured Speaker), American Association of School Administrators Conference (Multiple Presentations), National Association of Secondary School Principals Conference (Multiple Presentations), Texas Association of Secondary School Principals Conference (Multiple Presentations)
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation
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