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More armed security officers in US schools, study finds

Mar 29, 2018 | 7:15 AM

WASHINGTON — Armed security officers are becoming more prevalent at America’s schools, according to a federal study released Thursday amid a heated debate over whether teachers and other school officials should carry guns.

While student and staff fatalities at school persist, students report fewer instances of violence, theft and other abuse during the past decade, the survey found.

Armed officers were present at least once a week in 43 per cent of all public schools during the 2015-16 school year, compared with 31 per cent of schools a decade before, according to data from a survey conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics.

Last month’s mass shooting at a Florida high school put renewed focus on the role of armed school security guards, after a video showed that a sheriff’s deputy at the school approached but did not enter the building where the attack was taking place.

The study was released a day after Education Secretary Betsy DeVos kicked off a federal school safety panel, which has been criticized for not including teachers, students and experts. It comprises DeVos and three other Cabinet secretaries. DeVos told the House Appropriations Committee on Tuesday that the panel will include the secretaries of Homeland Security, Health and Human Services and the Justice Department. The first meeting of the commission was held behind closed doors and few details were released.

DeVos said in a statement Thursday that while there were some positive trends in the survey, “we know — and tragically have been reminded in recent weeks — there is much more to be done to keep our nation’s students and teachers safe at school.” DeVos said commission members will travel across the country to look for solutions to school violence.

The number of school deaths ranged from about 45 to 63 during the past decade; the higher totals were attributed to major shootings, such as ones at Sandy Hook Elementary School and Virginia Tech. In 2015-2016, 47 students or staff members were killed in school-associated attacks.

At the same time, the percentage of students who report being victimized at school dropped from 10 per cent in 1995 to 3 per cent a decade later.

The percentage of schools with a security guard, a school resource officer or other sworn law enforcement officer on campus at least once a week has gone up from 42 per cent in 2005-06 to 57 per cent a decade later. While security at schools of all grade levels increased, the shift is clearer among elementary schools, where the share with security staff has gone from 26 per cent to 45 per cent in the same time period.

“There has been an increase in security staff in school over the last 10 years and it’s more pronounced at the primary school level,” said Lauren Musu-Gillette, lead author of the report.

Experts, however, are divided on whether putting such officers on school campuses will make the schools safer or frighten children and lead to more arrests.

“There needs to be at least one in every school in the country,” said Mo Canady, executive director of the National Association of School Resource Officers. “Every school could benefit from one.”

School resource officers are sworn law enforcement personnel who have been trained to work in schools. Their duties include controlling outside traffic, patrolling the school, maintaining discipline, identifying problems and mentoring at-risk students, teaching law-related classes and serving as liaisons between schools and police. The school security study released Thursday includes school resource officers, other sworn law enforcement and additional security staff.

Ronald Stephens, executive director of the National School Safety Council, agrees, saying that trained officers carrying weapons can help prevent a shooting inside the school and deter a possible shooter from entering.

“It sends the signal that the school is being watched and that the care and supervision of children is an important priority,” Stephens said.

Others have questions.

A 2013 congressional report found that the available research “draws conflicting conclusions about whether SRO programs are effective at reducing school violence.”

“Also, the research does not address whether SRO programs deter school shootings, one of the key reasons for renewed congressional interest in these programs,” the study said.

Critics of putting weapons in schools point to the sheriff’s deputy in Parkland who stayed outside the school when 17 people were being killed. The officer, Deputy Scot Peterson, says he thought the shots were being fired from outside the school.

Ron Astor, an education professor at University of Southern California who specializes in school behaviour, says that putting weapons in schools will make them akin to prisons, intimidate children and hurt their studies. Instead, he says, research has shown that violence, bullying and the use of drugs and guns is reduced in warm, caring environments focused on providing support to students.

“With a lot of guns, it doesn’t create a sense of safety with the children and the teachers. It could trigger post-traumatic stress disorder. It triggers nonattendance,” Astor said.

“We don’t want to live in neighbourhoods where there are thousands of police officers or the military. Who likes to live in those neighbourhoods?” he said. “We like to live in neighbourhoods where we know each other, where people have good relationships with each other, where they are out on the streets, talking to each other.”

Maria Danilova And Larry Fenn, The Associated Press