The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ATLANTA: How schools address serious issue at Super Bowl.

Officials learn how to spot if students being harmed.

- By Vanessa McCray vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

As Atlanta readies for the Super Bowl, the school system is amping up efforts to train teachers and inform students about the risk of human traffickin­g.

Atlanta Public Schools Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n said students are in danger of being sex- ually exploited every day, and the Super Bowl is one more event that increases that risk.

“These events ... create horrible opportunit­ies for trafficker­s, for commercial sex and human exploitati­on, and they certainly take advantage of vulnerable teens and children who go to our schools,” Carstarphe­n said.

She and about a hundred APS administra­tors attended a training session Friday about human traffickin­g and how to spot signs that students are being harmed.

Sim i lar training a nd awareness efforts are taking place in Atlanta schools, some of which are near Mercedes-Benz Stadium, where the Super Bowl will be played Feb. 3.

“We have schools all right up in there, and if they didn’t have enough drama in the regular day this is going to super-size their exposure,” Carstarphe­n said.

She said a study shows 90 percent of Georgia children who are sex-traffickin­g vic- tims were enrolled in school at the time of their exploita- tion.

“So they were still doing their day job as a student, but were going through this. And, we need adults to be alert enough to ask the right questions, to be able identify kids in crisis and to ensure that they lean in when they have to,” she said.

Signs that a student could be in trouble include physical indicators — such as marks on the body that could indicate the student has been abused or restrained and signs of having been deprived of food or sleep.

Teachers, nurses, social workers and other school staff are also being told to remain vigilant for other sig- nals that students could be in danger: If they talk about traveling frequently to other cities, if their grades sud- denly slip, if they show dramatic changes in behavior or how they dress, or even have new tattoos.

Unexplaine­d school absences, inattentio­n, forget- fulness, exhaustion or hang- ing out with new friends also can be indicators of exploitati­on, said Dr. Jordan Green- baum, who works with abused children as a physician with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.

The school board approved two new policies in December related to child traffickin­g. The new rules require all APS employees, contractor­s and volunteers to report instances of traffickin­g. They also authorize the superinten­dent to train employees about sex traffickin­g as well as offer counseling, health and social work services, and other support to students in need.

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