Chattanooga Times Free Press

School virtual shooter training program aimed at survival

-

“We have to worry about both children and adults being suspects.”

– PROJECT MANAGER BOB WALKER

ORLANDO, Fla. — The shooter rapidly fires through the front doors of an elementary school with an assault rifle and blasts his way down the hallway. Screaming children are running for their lives or frozen in fear. Teachers quickly try to decide: barricade the doors, or make a run for it with their students?

Police officers arrive with guns drawn, working their way through the school. Finally they confront the shooter and end the threat.

Using cutting-edge video game technology and animation, the U.S. Army and Homeland Security Department have developed a computer-based simulator that can train everyone from teachers to first responders on how to react to an active shooter scenario. The training center is housed at the University of Central Florida in Orlando and offers numerous role-playing opportunit­ies that can be used to train anyone in the world with a computer.

“With teachers, they did not self-select into a role where they expect to have bullets flying near them. Unfortunat­ely, it’s becoming a reality,” said Tamara Griffith, a chief engineer for the project. “We want to teach teachers how to respond as first responders.”

The $5.6 million program — known as the Enhanced Dynamic Geo-Social Environmen­t, or EDGE — is similar to those used by the Army to train soldiers in combat tactics and scenarios using a virtual environmen­t.

Originally designed for police and fire agencies, the civilian version is being expanded to schools to allow teachers and school personnel to train for active shooters alongside first responders. Homeland Security officials say the school version should be ready for launch by spring.

Each character has numerous options, including someone playing the bad guy, said project manager Bob Walker. Each teacher has seven options on how to keep students safe, and some of the students in the program might not respond or be too afraid to react. So that becomes another problem to be solved.

“Once you hear the children, the screaming, it makes it very, very real,” Walker said.

The program can have the shooter be either an adult or a child.

“We have to worry about both children and adults being suspects,” he said.

The program’s designers listened to real dispatch tapes to understand the confusion and chaos of such frightenin­g situations, Griffith said. They also talked to the mother of a child killed in the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States