The Denver Post

Run, hide or fight?

Heroism during STEM School shooting praised, but some worry coverage will push kids to put themselves in harm’s way

- By Jessica Seaman and Meg Wingerter

When two teenagers began firing on their classmates at STEM School Highlands Ranch last week, at least three students charged one of the suspects — a decision that cost one of the teens his life.

Kendrick Castillo’s death was the second within a week involving a student who tackled a perpetrato­r of a school shooting. Eight days earlier, Riley Howell was killed charging the gunman in a shooting at the University of North Carolina-Charlotte.

The actions by these students who took down shooters are heralded as heroic and credited for preventing further deaths. But their stories have drawn concern from psychologi­sts who worry that such narratives will place children and teens at further risk by sending the message they must act like a “superman or (super)woman” during mass shootings.

“We don’t want any kid, certainly some of the younger kids, thinking this is what they have to do,” said Dr. Steven Berkowitz, a visiting professor in psychiatry at the University of Colorado’s Anschutz Medical Campus.

Most school districts in the Denver area teach fighting back as an option during a shooting — but only when it’s not possible to get away from an attack.

At Jeffco Public Schools, where the massacre at Columbine High took place 20 years ago, students and teachers are encouraged to lock down their classrooms, if they can do so safely.

Encouragin­g people to stay in place cuts down on the chaos when law enforcemen­t ar

rives and decreases the odds students will run into a shooter’s path or be injured accidental­ly if police fire on a suspect, said John McDonald, Jeffco’s executive director of school safety.

“People don’t understand that a lot of the lockdown tactics are to support our law enforcemen­t officers,” he said.

However, fleeing the building is also an option, if students can get out the door faster than finding safe sheltering spots. Students defending themselves is another option, including in situations such as at STEM School, when a perpetrato­r is in a classroom. But schools don’t want students to seek out shooters, McDonald said.

At Denver Public Schools, the response options to a potential shooter are framed as “escape, evade, engage,” rather than “run, hide, fight.” This means getting out or hiding if students can, and engaging the shooter — including verbally — only if there is no better option, said Mike Eaton, chief of the safety department.

“I think ‘fight’ is sometimes misunderst­ood,” he said. “While we want to teach the kids to run away, it’s not always safe.”

Denver schools are in an urban area, so help from law enforcemen­t will arrive within minutes, and students need to think in terms of how to survive those first minutes, Eaton said.

“There’s no cookie-cutter response to ‘if this, then that,’ ” he said.

The concerns about students putting themselves at risk by fighting back come as news coverage of mass shootings increasing­ly focuses more on the survivors and victims of such attacks than the perpetrato­rs.

This is in response to the No Notoriety movement, which calls for news coverage to limit the focus on the identity of suspects to avoid giving them infamy and in

spiring copycat attacks. (The Denver Post is using the names and photos of the STEM School shooting suspects

sparingly.)

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While it is understand­able to not want to encourage kids to risk their lives, there is not enough data to support whether news coverage of students charging attackers is affecting others, said Jaclyn Schildkrau­t, associate professor in the criminal justice department at State University of New York-Oswego.

She added, “The reality is everybody that is commenting on this has never been in a shooting,” so none of us can say how we would react.”

But Berkowitz said stories of heroism can put additional pressure on children: “The harm is that they act in a heroic manner and put themselves in danger. That’s not their job. They’re not in the military. They’re young people, and they have lives ahead of them.”

 ?? Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? Shooting victim Josh Jones arrives on crutches Tuesday at the Falls Events Center with his parents David and Lorie before speaking to the media for the first time since the May 7 shooting at STEM School Highlands Ranch.
Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post Shooting victim Josh Jones arrives on crutches Tuesday at the Falls Events Center with his parents David and Lorie before speaking to the media for the first time since the May 7 shooting at STEM School Highlands Ranch.
 ?? Michael Ciaglo, Getty Images ?? STEM School Highlands Ranch senior Brendan Bialy comforts his mother, Dena Martin, as he speaks to the media on May 8 in Englewood.
Michael Ciaglo, Getty Images STEM School Highlands Ranch senior Brendan Bialy comforts his mother, Dena Martin, as he speaks to the media on May 8 in Englewood.
 ??  ?? Riley Howell
Riley Howell

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