Originally posted by: Outdoormongoose
Arch: Do you think it's wiser for the school itself to have a plan that doesn't involve students? My local districts use codewords and the school does a lockdown. The students may not even know the school is locked down at first.
For elementary school, where students are almost always with their teacher in some way, that probably makes the most sense.
There simply isn't a need to complicate elementary kids lives with even thinking about this kind of issue when the statistical risk to elementary schools is so incredibly tiny in the first place.
Let kids that age just be kids and let the adults worry about this shit.
That isn't coddling or sheltering in some kind of detrimental way.
It is recognizing that, developmentally, kids that age need to feel safe and there simply is no useful reason for intentionally making them feel artificially unsafe as part of a roleplay exercise.
That is using our adult logic to recognize that the practical risk to these kids (at elementary school, specifically) is MINISCULE to where it almost certainly does more harm that good for them to have school shootings (or "bad guys" at school) on their radar at all.
Train the teachers on how to conduct a lockdown.
Give the kids some kind of topic-neutral lockdown practice (lights out / stay quiet).
But complicating the issue with kids worrying about "bad guys" at school has no practical benefit.