Anonymous wrote:America.
Anonymous wrote:My children have never been scared of the lock down drills and come home telling me all about then. I remember sleepless nights crying as a child because I was scared we would die in nuclear war. Forgot about that until reading these posts. All kids are different.
Anonymous wrote:OP here: I'm fine with the drills- sadly they may be necessary- I just think the explanation needs to be more age appropriate especially for kids in week 3 of formal school. Agree with PP who suggested saying something like, ""We are practicing what to do in case there's an emergency."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's nothing new. When I was a kid, it was because the Russians were going to nuke us. It's a simple drill, kids get it...
It's interesting because I keep having the same conversation with friends about how we were all terrified of dying in a nuclear strike. I don't think drills like this would have saved the kids at Sandy Hook. Any tiny benefit gained by this training isn't worth the trauma.
Actually, drills did save quite a few children in Sandy Hook. The teachers closed their doors and pulled down the shades and made it look like the classroom was empty in many classrooms.
Did those drills involve children. I've done active shooter trainings. I think they are appropriate for educators (although the big takeaway in mine was "you need to know that no one is coming in to save you until the shooting stops"), but not for kindergarteners.
Anonymous wrote:My DC's 1st grade teacher explained that they were practicing hiding in case a bear got in the school. As they appear regularly in the neighborhoods here, that made sense to her.