Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here.
Unfortunately, our lockdown drills are only for show at my school.
1. Wait for an announcement over the PA that we are in a 'hard' lock down.
2. Lock the classroom door.
3. Pull down the shade over the large window on the door and turn off the lights.
4. Tell the students to put their heads down on their desks and remain quiet.
5. Wait for an all-clear over the PA system.
I don't know a single teacher who will stick to that plan. We don't have anywhere to hide in the classroom, and anyone who wants to get in would simply have to break the window on the door and turn the handle.
My plan is to use a chair to break one of the windows in the back of the classroom, throw some coats over the broken glass on the frame, and get as many kids out that way as possible.
I've told my daughter to hide or play dead. It's sad that this is the reality that we live in.
Please don't. While you may disagree with shelter in place, it is currently thought to be the best. Having kids running out of the building may put them in danger from the actual shooter, police responding to the scene, and other people fleeing the scene. More importantly, the lockdown probably does not even actually involve an active shooter (or one at least one in the building), so now you would have scared kids running from the school without a designated muster location. If there was an active shooter nearby, resources are going to need to be diverted to find the missing children and making sure they are okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here.
Unfortunately, our lockdown drills are only for show at my school.
1. Wait for an announcement over the PA that we are in a 'hard' lock down.
2. Lock the classroom door.
3. Pull down the shade over the large window on the door and turn off the lights.
4. Tell the students to put their heads down on their desks and remain quiet.
5. Wait for an all-clear over the PA system.
I don't know a single teacher who will stick to that plan. We don't have anywhere to hide in the classroom, and anyone who wants to get in would simply have to break the window on the door and turn the handle.
My plan is to use a chair to break one of the windows in the back of the classroom, throw some coats over the broken glass on the frame, and get as many kids out that way as possible.
I've told my daughter to hide or play dead. It's sad that this is the reality that we live in.
Please don't. While you may disagree with shelter in place, it is currently thought to be the best. Having kids running out of the building may put them in danger from the actual shooter, police responding to the scene, and other people fleeing the scene. More importantly, the lockdown probably does not even actually involve an active shooter (or one at least one in the building), so now you would have scared kids running from the school without a designated muster location. If there was an active shooter nearby, resources are going to need to be diverted to find the missing children and making sure they are okay.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here.
Unfortunately, our lockdown drills are only for show at my school.
1. Wait for an announcement over the PA that we are in a 'hard' lock down.
2. Lock the classroom door.
3. Pull down the shade over the large window on the door and turn off the lights.
4. Tell the students to put their heads down on their desks and remain quiet.
5. Wait for an all-clear over the PA system.
I don't know a single teacher who will stick to that plan. We don't have anywhere to hide in the classroom, and anyone who wants to get in would simply have to break the window on the door and turn the handle.
My plan is to use a chair to break one of the windows in the back of the classroom, throw some coats over the broken glass on the frame, and get as many kids out that way as possible.
I've told my daughter to hide or play dead. It's sad that this is the reality that we live in.
Anonymous wrote:Not only do our kids have drills, but last week Murch had the real thing ordered by the Secret Service when they had an active threat at the embassy across the street (turned out to be nothing). Fun times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do in APS. Don't think that it will save anyone though. If an active shooter wants to kill people he will. The only thing that will stop him is someone else with a gun unless he kills himself first.
I've had friends in suburban areas tell me that their kids have been subjected to full tactical active shooter drills at school-so swat teams descend and the kids are participants in the drill. In my opinion that is some macho bullshit hero fantasy that will terrify our kids but never save them.
Anonymous wrote:We do in APS. Don't think that it will save anyone though. If an active shooter wants to kill people he will. The only thing that will stop him is someone else with a gun unless he kills himself first.