Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Adding terror tactics to curriculum

- By Carolyn Thompson and Michael Melia

School leaders increasing­ly empowering students and staff to try to disrupt an assailant if all else fails.

BALTIMORE — The actions of students who died tackling gunmen at two U.S. campuses a week apart have been hailed as heroic. At a growing number of schools around the country, they also reflect guidance to students, at least in some situations, to do what they can to disrupt shootings.

A majority of districts have embraced such an approach, with experts saying educators need to give staff and students as many options as possible in the worst-case scenario.

“In all honesty, I don’t know of another strategy,” said teacher Kelly Chavis, whose Rock Hill, South Carolina, school endorses a strategy known as Avoid, Deny, Defend. “What else would you do if you did not try to get away in a situation?”

Many schools have stuck with the traditiona­l approach of locking down classrooms and letting law enforcemen­t confront the shooter, especially in grade schools. Encouragin­g students or faculty to do otherwise, critics say, could make them more of a target.

At the STEM School Highlands Ranch in suburban Denver, where student Kendrick Castillo was killed while confrontin­g a gunman on May 7, the school uses a “Locks, Lights, Out of Sight” protocol, according to spokesman Gil Rudawsky. He declined to say whether any of the school’s training for students addresses whether they should fight an intruder.

But Brendan Bialy had thought about it on his own. He lunged with Castillo toward the gunman and wrestled the gun from his hand.

“I don’t like the idea of running and hiding,” he told reporters on May 8 “There’s certain situations if you got to get out of it, you got to get out of it, but like, I’m not going to say, like, cower or move out of the way for somebody who’s right in front of me. Somebody like that, I’m going to fight them there.”

Riley Howell, 21, died thwarting a shooter the week before at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Alert messages at that campus advised students to “Run, Hide, Fight.”

There always have been students willing to take action, said Greg Crane, who founded the for-profit ALICE Institute, which stands for Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, Evacuate. He said he created it in 2001 based on what had already been done by students including Jake Ryker, who tackled a shooter at Thurston High School in Oregon in 1998 despite being shot in the chest.

Many people have a “warrior mindset, a hero mindset,” Crane said. “It’s just, have we cultivated them with some informatio­n and with some training so that when they are the first one to stand up and start moving to do something, maybe they’re not alone?”

Educators from over 5,000 school districts have received the program’s training, often from certified law enforcemen­t officers, Crane said. He said the program does not teach fighting strategies. Rather, it encourages people to make noise, create distractio­ns and confuse the attacker.

Baltimore County Public Schools adopted ALICE this school year.

If an assailant gets too close, students are told to grab anything and throw it and scream, with the idea being to create enough chaos to escape. No young students are told to tackle or otherwise try to make physical contact, but staff members and older students have that option, Superinten­dent George Roberts said.

“The adults are trained how to grab the arms, grab the legs and subdue” until police arrive, said Roberts, who was principal at Maryland’s Perry Hall High School in 2012 when a student brought a shotgun into the cafeteria and critically wounded another student.

Karen Shepard has several children and grandchild­ren in the Athens, Pennsylvan­ia, school district, which also adopted ALICE training this year. She said she would prefer the children know not to stand clustered in a corner if a gunman burst into their classroom.

“They should barricade, (and) they should have something in their hands,” she said. “At least they’d have a fighting chance.”

It’s a frightenin­g conversati­on at any level, said Joseph Erardi, who was superinten­dent in Newtown, Connecticu­t, for four years after a gunman killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP 2013 ?? Participan­ts race out of the cafeteria after hearing gunshots during an exercise at a Massachuse­tts high school.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP 2013 Participan­ts race out of the cafeteria after hearing gunshots during an exercise at a Massachuse­tts high school.

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