The News (New Glasgow)

Looking for advice

Columbine principal’s advice sought after Florida shooting

- BY TERRY SPENCER

Administra­tors reach out to former Columbine principal for advice after school shootings

After school shootings like the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, administra­tors reach out to former Columbine High principal Frank DeAngelis for advice, since there is no book to teach what he learned after gunmen killed 12 of his students and a teacher in 1999.

There should be no balloons at Stoneman Douglas’ welcomebac­k ceremony, he told the school’s administra­tor. The reason: some balloons popped at Columbine’s reopening, sending students diving for cover. Have substitute­s on hand in case teachers need time to compose themselves. Change the sound of the fire alarm, which got pulled at both Columbine and Stoneman Douglas during the shootings, or it will cause some to panic.

DeAngelis, who has spoken to Stoneman Douglas’ principal, said everyone must understand that the staff and students will never return to what they were before the shooting.

“It really is a marathon and not a sprint,” he said in a phone interview from his Colorado home. “There are going to be days when everything seems to be getting back to where it might have been prior, but then something happens to hinder the healing

process. One of things people asked me right after Columbine is, ‘When is it going to be back to normal?’ I said it never really gets back to normal.”

Stoneman Douglas’s 3,200 students are scheduled to return today, two weeks after authoritie­s say 19-year-old former student Nikolas Cruz opened fire on Valentine’s Day, killing 14 students and three staff members.

He is charged with 17 counts of murder and could face the death penalty.

School officials say they will have counsellor­s at Stoneman Douglas indefinite­ly to help students and staff. Extra armed security will also be on campus through the end of the school year.

Megan Faberman, an 18-yearold senior who plans to study psychiatri­c neuroscien­ce at the University of Central Florida, said at a rally outside Stoneman Douglas that she and her friends are going to walk “arm in arm into the school” to defy Cruz.

“We are not going to let him win,” she said.

At Virginia Tech, where a gunman killed 32 people in April 2007, teachers and students were given “the greatest flexibilit­y possible” for determinin­g how they wanted to move forward that semester, spokesman Mark Owczarski said.

When students returned to class, they were allowed to take whatever grade they had at the time of the shooting, accept a passfall mark or complete their courses in another semester.

Numerous counsellor­s were assigned to campus and given purple armbands so they were easily identifiab­le in case someone needed immediate help.

DeAngelis, who retired in 2014, said the survivors will deal with the tragedy in different ways.

“Some people needed to constantly talk about the experience and their feelings and where they are at any particular day and any particular moment,” he said. “You had others who felt that ‘The sooner I get back to teaching and get back to the activities I was involved with prior to the tragedy, it will help me move forward.’ And then you had those people in between. For everyone, it is a challenge.”

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 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Columbine High School principal Frank DeAngelis standing in the entry of the school in Littleton, Colo. Following school shootings like the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, administra­tors reach out to the former Columbine High principal as...
AP PHOTO Columbine High School principal Frank DeAngelis standing in the entry of the school in Littleton, Colo. Following school shootings like the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, administra­tors reach out to the former Columbine High principal as...

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