Should Students Defend Themselves
Via Joanne Jacobs comes a story about Burelson school district — located outside Fort Worth, Texas — where students are being trained to defend themselves against would-be school shooters.
“Getting under desks and praying for rescue from professionals is not a recipe for success,” said Robin Browne, a major in the British Army reserve and an instructor for Response Options, the company providing the training to the Burleson schools.
That kind of fight-back advice is all but unheard of among schools, and some fear it will get children killed.
But school officials in Burleson said they are drawing on the lessons learned from a string of disasters such as Columbine in 1999 and the Amish schoolhouse attack in Pennsylvania last week. [...]
Browne recommends students and teachers “react immediately to the sight of a gun by picking up anything and everything and throwing it at the head and body of the attacker and making as much noise as possible. Go toward him as fast as we can and bring them down.”
Response Options trains students and teachers to “lock onto the attacker’s limbs and use their body weight,” Browne said. Everyday classroom objects, such as paperbacks and pencils, can become weapons.
“We show them they can win,” he said. “The fact that someone walks into a classroom with a gun does not make them a god. Five or six seventh-grade kids and a 95-pound art teacher can basically challenge, bring down and immobilize a 200-pound man with a gun.” (Source)
I can’t say I’m thrilled about schools compelling children to attend and then looking to the children to defend themselves. But, if nothing else, at least kids don’t need to feel like they’re sitting ducks just because the school district can’t figure out how to keep armed people from walking its halls.
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What? Public Dojo’s?
Cool!