Wednesday, October 11, 2006

be-safe

Of all the sunsets I've seen worldwide, Colorado's are my favorite, but Colorado sunsets in autumn are my favorite of favorites. My daughter and I saw one on her way home from work yesterday. Blue mountains. Trees ablaze. Gilded suggestions of clouds in an otherwise pristine sky.

Against this gorgeous backdrop, our conversation turned to the relentless instances of school violence in recent weeks. The day before yesterday, a 13-year-old brought an AK-47 replica to his middle school and fired a round into the ceiling before the gun jammed. I read in the paper today that prosecutors are seeking permission to try him as an adult.

My son is 12. He's no adult.

And this didn't take place in NYC or LA. Try Joplin, Missouri. Like Platte Canyon, CO, Lancaster, PA, and Cazenovia, WI, a place where this isn't supposed to happen. (But is it ever supposed to happen anywhere?)

Since teacher-bloggers and, according to my students, their preservice classrooms have been curiously silent on the subject (see one notable exception Bud Hunt found for me), I've decided we need to talk about it in my CO301D class. So we're reading articles and blogging our own ideas on these matters over the next few days.

I was also curious to see if any conversations had occurred at my daughter's high school, thus our sunset conversation. She said the principal came over the intercom the day after Platte Canyon and told the students not to be afraid because the school would do everything they could to keep them safe. The following day, her English teacher told the class that plain-clothes police officers would be roaming the commons area over the next several days because a gang fight had taken after school. The teacher went on to review what they should do if the school went into lockdown. "Mom, he said, 'I'm not going to lie to you. This classroom is probably the most vulnerable in the school because we have all these windows, but here's what we would do if something happened.'" He went on to tell them what to do if he wasn't there, where to find the key to lock the door and how to deal with the windows. "You know, Mom, in case there was a sub or something," she said.

(I'm not so sure he was talking about a sub.)

Sitting there, thinking about the inadequacy of plans and procedures when 13-year-olds are carrying assault rifles around in their backpacks, I asked her if the conversation made her feel safe. I was surprised by her answer.

"Yeah, it really did. No one ever thinks anything will ever happen in their safe little town, so they don't talk about it. Well, it can happen anywhere, and if it does, it makes kids feel safer when they know what they can do."

I think Lexie is right, though I hate it that she's had to come to such wisdom at the ripe old age of 18. These events do prove that unthinkable violence can happen anywhere and no fail-safe plan exists. (And I think about this every morning when I see my kids off to school.) But it helps somehow to talk about it, to have a plan even in the face of our vulnerability.

In coming posts, I'll let you know what I and my students, who are studying to be teachers, think English teachers in particular might be able to do. In the meantime, be-safe.

8 comments:

jules said...

It is sad that this has become a reality in small towns as well as big cities. I am scared to see my sister go off to high school! I am nervous that I am one day going to be in the middle of all of the angry mess. I haven't quite decided what I am going to say to my students if, God forbid, the issue ever becomes reality; but never the less i have been thinking about it. I hope that the time will never come that I will have to have a conversation about tragic violence in the schools, but I am sure that just as the sun will set, I will...so until then i will think.

deemae said...

school violence is a rather scary thought and many of us truly choose to ignore it or assume it will never happen here. i think it should be talked about so we can try to prevent such horrible acts and learn more about why they occur. it is great that you had this conversation with your children and i am sure they will some of the very few who have discussed it. What really has developed in our schooling to where violence now enters the doors with the students?

ctarver said...
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jtwrig said...

Like your children, I was quite young when i had my first experience of school violence. At the time of Columbine, (I was a freshman) teachers and the media spoke about it in such an isolated manner that it almost seemed like a "fluke.' We went over some safety concerns; however, the conversations quickly stopped. I expected to hear a lot of buzz in the schools after Platte Canyon's tragedy. Once again, it wasn't really talked about. It really bothers me. Either as a society we are setting up a lot of boundaries regarding what is okay or not okay to talk about OR issues like school violence have become normalized. Either option seems frightening. I think that students, teachers and parents need to know that there is a plan in place. Students need to feel comfortable talking about these issues. It gives us more insight into their lives and experiences.

ctarver said...

Cindy,
I love the fact that you are taking the iniative to talk about school viloence, especially in a college setting, because so few people do. I have a son on the way, and I am more inclined to think about stuff like this, because sooner than I'd like, I would be sending him off to school. Frankly, this stuff frightens me.

chase said...

This seems to be a scary reality in our lives in this day in age. i personally think that these tradgedys simply will not stop happening. i think that what our society needs to do is quit putting these shootings in the news. i feel that, not only do they add to the unhappy topics already discussed in the news, but they fuel the fire of these troubled students or non-students. i feel like if someone were to plan on doing something like this i think that there would be no more perfect time than right after another incident has just occurred. i do think that the victims need to be mourned, but at the same time i think that the more our society and our troubled teens hear about this, the more it is going to happen because they see it happening all the time. most of the time i think that these people want to get the publicity, and we sure as hell are giving it it to them. if we can have these tradgedys not be a part of our everyday media i believe it would really help the situation.

chase said...
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jtwrig said...

I know I already commented on your post, but I was recently having a conversation with an educator about the recent school events. I asked her about some of the policies or discussions that had occured in the school she was teaching at. We talked about some of the drills that they had practices (paper on the windows, desks as protection, etc) and then she mentioned something a few of her stduents had asked. They said, "ok so we know what to do if someone is inside our school, we will barricade ourselves in. But what do we do if it is ONE OF US in the room with the gun or whatever?" I was speechless for two reason. First, I was shocked that students would even be thinking about something that horrible, but also because neither myself nor the other educator could come up with an answer.