Anonymous wrote:My experience with trailers due to renovation is that if any classes are put out there, it is the older kids NOT kindergarteners, so this is not something you should lose sleep over.
My K daughter moved classrooms twice due to renovations, but always inside the building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I learned a lot about random shooter events at a training my workplace held earlier this year. Here's why trailers wouldn't worry me.
--most people are going for a specific person and once they find them they are done. So if a shooter wants my child's teacher, it doesn't matter if they are in a trailer or in the main school building.
--the rest are using their video game skills to go for high body count before the police arrive. Going outside to go from trailer to trailer is not efficient, AND it exposes them to emergency responders in a way that staying inside a building doesn't.
dark -- but practical.
Anonymous wrote:It seems like these days most public schools have implemented various levels of security and now have shelter-in-place drills for their staff and students. What about kids in the trailers or re-locatables. If you worry about things like school safety, do you feel less secure with your child in one of the trailers instead of the main school building? Does anyone know how secure they are in the event of a potentially violent scenario?
Please, if you don't think about such things, don't comment and ridicule those of us that do. Reasonable or not, these thoughts are on my mind as we prep my child for kindergarten next year. Our neighborhood school will be underconstruction and there's a great likelihood that my child will be in a trailer. It's another of those great unknowns to me right now.
Anonymous wrote:I learned a lot about random shooter events at a training my workplace held earlier this year. Here's why trailers wouldn't worry me.
--most people are going for a specific person and once they find them they are done. So if a shooter wants my child's teacher, it doesn't matter if they are in a trailer or in the main school building.
--the rest are using their video game skills to go for high body count before the police arrive. Going outside to go from trailer to trailer is not efficient, AND it exposes them to emergency responders in a way that staying inside a building doesn't.
Anonymous wrote:It seems like these days most public schools have implemented various levels of security and now have shelter-in-place drills for their staff and students. What about kids in the trailers or re-locatables. If you worry about things like school safety, do you feel less secure with your child in one of the trailers instead of the main school building? Does anyone know how secure they are in the event of a potentially violent scenario?
Please, if you don't think about such things, don't comment and ridicule those of us that do. Reasonable or not, these thoughts are on my mind as we prep my child for kindergarten next year. Our neighborhood school will be underconstruction and there's a great likelihood that my child will be in a trailer. It's another of those great unknowns to me right now.