Tanisha was just 6-years-old the first time she was in a shooting.
She was home in the kitchen looking for a cookie when she heard a “pop pop pop” sound.
Her mother rushed into the room and told her to get down.
Tanisha didn’t know what was happening.
“Hush, Baby,” her mom said wrapping the child in her arms and pulling her to the floor. “Someone’s out there shooting up the neighborhood.”
That was a story one of my 8th grade students told me today.
And it was far from the only one.
For the first time, my urban school district in Western Pennsylvania had an ALICE training for the students.
The program helps prepare schools, businesses and churches in case of an active shooter. Its name is an acronym for its suggested courses of action – Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, and Evacuate.
In a district like mine where three separate gunmen went on sprees within 5 miles of each other during the last few years, this sort of training is becoming more frequent.
We’ve had numerous seminars for the teachers – even active shooter drills. With the students, we’ve had lockdown drills were the kids were basically instructed to duck and cover under their desks or in corners or closets.
But this was the first time the danger was made explicit in an assembly by grade level.
Our school resource officer and middle school principal stood side-by-side before the 8th grade going over in detail how someone might come into the building with the express purpose to kill as many of them as possible.
And then they told these 12 and 13-year-olds that it was up to them to do something about it.
That hiding wasn’t good enough. They needed to try to escape or incapacitate the attacker.
It still shocks me that we’ve gotten to this point.
We no longer expect society to keep us safe – to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people.
It’s up to the children to watch out for themselves.
I can tell you as a teacher with more than 15 years experience in the classroom, I have never seen kids so quiet as they were in that auditorium.
It makes me sick.
When I was their age I was playing with Luke Skywalker action figures and building space ships out of Legos. I wasn’t discussing with police how to avoid a bullet to the brain. I wasn’t advised to wear my backpack on my chest to help protect against being gut shot.
I wasn’t then going back to class and talking over with my teacher how we can best barricade the room against any would-be bad guys.
But that’s what we did today.
I tried to reassure my kids that they were safe, that we could secure the door and if worst came to worst I wouldn’t let anything happen to them.
But these children aren’t like I was at their age.
They were shocked by the directness of the assembly. But they were no strangers to violence.
Later in the day, so many of them came back to me to talk about their relationship to guns and how firearms impacted their lives.
“I know you can’t get an automatic rifle unless…”
“I have a friend whose brother…”
“You don’t know what it’s like to lose your best friend to a gun.”
One of them had been friends with Antwon Rose in East Pittsburgh friends with Antwon Rose in East Pittsburgh. They knew all the details about how he ran from police and was shot down.
Someone coming into the school with a gun? Heck! They experience that everyday with the police.
For many of my kids, law enforcement isn’t automatically a comforting thought. They don’t trust the uniform. Often with good reason.
And now they were being told that safety was just another one of their responsibilities – like doing their homework and picking up after themselves in the cafeteria.
I can’t shake the feeling that these kids are being cheated – that the world we’ve built isn’t worthy of them.
What point is a society that can’t keep its own children safe?
What point police and firefighters and lawmakers and courts and laws and even a system of justice if we can’t use them to protect our own kids?
Isn’t that our job?
Isn’t that what adults are supposed to do?
Keep the danger out there so that the little ones can grow up and inherit a better world?
But we don’t even try to do that anymore.
No more pushing for better laws and safer regulations.
Just look the kids straight in the eye and tell them that death may be coming and there’s nothing we can do about it.
It’s up to them.
If that’s the best we can do, then shame on us.
Still can’t get enough Gadfly? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!
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We are living in a world like The Hunger Games.
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Sad but true.
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I wonder how many shootings outside her parents mansion and estate sent Betsy DeVos scrambling to the floor when she was a child growing up?
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I don’t know, Lloyd, but I’ll bet her family profited off of many of them outside the homes of my students.
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How many body guards does Betsy DeVos have 24/7 vs how mAnd tany armed bodyguards your students have?
And the reason Betsy had to have so many bodyguards is because of all the death threats she’d gotten since she became Sectary of Education.
I’ll bet few of any of your students have had death threats for the same reasons.
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And we’re paying for Betsy’s bodyguards just as we’re paying for her family’s profits with our children’s lives.
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It’s ironic that the people Betsy the Brainless fears are paying for her protection.
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That’s America in a nutshell.
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Reblogged this on Politicians Are Poody Heads and commented:
The fact that there are “active shooter drills” in so many of our schools hurts my heart. And I find the ALICE training particularly reprehensible. Expecting children to go after the shooter???
What kind of a country are we?
Gun control NOW!!!
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So strategically teaching kids that there is no solution to problems save guns…. “Someone coming into the school with a gun? Heck! They experience that everyday with the police.”
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[…] There were no drills planned for today. In fact, it would have been a really poor time for one. We had just had ALICE training the day before where the resource officer and the principal had met with students to go over what to do in case of […]
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[…] We need to do more. […]
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