What Will They Do Under Stress

A news reporter called to see if school officials had been properly prepared for a crisis situation in his community. The reporter emphasized that he did not wish to cover the incident in a critical manner if school officials had acted properly, but he had concerns that their response to an incident might not have been appropriate. In methodical detail, he described how he had obtained security camera footage from the school, a tape of the 911 call and a tape of the law enforcement radio traffic during their response to the incident. He described the actions of school officials documented by security cameras and the 911 call, and laid out the timeline he had developed based on all three resources.

While some of the actions described miay sound problematic to the layperson, they were actually quite appropriate. At the same time, a number of the actions he described were pretty clear indications of a lack of preparedness, and pretty solid indicators that school employees had not been properly prepared to function under the stress of an actual crisis event. If his descriptions are accurate, school officials will likely have some significant problems with issues of public trust and may be highly exposed to successful litigation in regard to the manner in they handled the incident — since a student died.

As important as proper school crisis plan development, distribution and training are, the methods used to properly equip staff to function under extreme stress are at least as important and, in some cases, are more important than the quality of crisis plans. The proper utilization of a progressive exercise program, incorporating scenarios requiring independent judgment of staff, as well as directed actions accompanied by training on how staff can overcome the powerful effects of stress, are invaluable ways to help prepare staff for crisis situations. In a number of instances around the nation and abroad, school employees have demonstrated an almost amazing ability to function under extreme conditions, including the September 11th attack on the World Trade Center, an attack on an elementary school in Holland by terrorists armed with fully automatic weapons and hand grenades, an accidental detonation of an M-79 grenade in a Georgia high school band room, a near tragedy averted by a heroic school bus driver in Minnesota and a number of other extraordinarily challenging situations where school employees rose to extreme challenges when young lives were at stake.

These examples demonstrate why school officials and their public safety partners should emphasize research-proven methodologies such as crisis breathing, visualization, staff directed emergency drills requiring independent as well as directed actions, and other proven approaches to improve the chances that staff members will retain effective cognitive reasoning capabilities during crisis situations. Fortunately, a growing number of schools and school systems are moving beyond paper plans and software approaches to address the critical aspect of human performance under extreme stress.

Simple yet critical action steps, like remembering to take an emergency kit during an evacuation, can be easily forgotten by school staff acting under extreme stress during an emergency if they have not been properly prepared for crisis situations.

Featured

  • DLR Group Appoints New K–12 Education Practice Leader

    Integrated design firm DLR Group recently announced that it has named its new global K–12 Education leader, Senior Principal Carmen Wyckoff, AIA, LEED AP, according to a news release. Her teams have members in all 36 of the firm’s offices in the U.S., Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Europe, and Asia.

  • UT System Board of Regents Approves $108M Housing Complex

    The University of Texas System Board of Regents recently announced the approval of a new, $108-million housing complex at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), according to a news release. The facility will stand four stories and have a total of 456 new beds for freshmen students.

  • University of Kentucky Receives $150M Gift Toward New Arts District

    The University of Kentucky’s Board of Trustees recently received a $150-million gift from The Bill Gatton Foundation, according to a university news release, to build a new arts district on the campus in Lexington, Ky. The new district will feature a new College of Fine Arts building and a multi-hundred-seat theater, among other amenities.

  • textured paper collage shows a school building on fire as a fire truck sprays water into the flames

    Why a Fire Loss Is More than Flames

    We've all seen what fire damage can do to a property, but the types of damage building owners often encounter after a fire loss can exceed expectations. Having full awareness of the different forms of damage properties can sustain helps owners respond faster, reduce continued damage, and get back on the road to recovery in short order.

Digital Edition