Security Special Section
Mind The Gap
PHOTO © MONKEY BUSINESS IMAGES
Visitors to London are familiar with
the iconic phrase “mind the gap”. This
caution is repeated at every stop on
The Tube, London’s famous subway
system. Passengers are advised to pay
particular attention to the gap between
the platform and the exit doorway of
the train. Stepping into this gap can
prove disastrous. Similarly, a failure
to notice the gap between perceived
school security measures and actual
school security practices can also provide
an entrance to disaster.
INACCURATE PERCEPTIONS CAN KILL
During a school security assessment for one of the largest public school systems
in America, our analysts found that students had been getting weapons into district
middle and high schools. These incidents were occurring in spite of a thorough
weapons-screening process at the entrance of the district’s secondary schools. The
problem was not the weapons-screening approach, but rather stemmed from poor
access-control practices. Teachers and support-staff members in some schools had
developed bad habits, such as propping exit doors open. Students had quickly figured
out that they could simply bypass the weapons screening checkpoints to bring guns,
knives and other weapons into these schools.
Of additional concern was the unrealistic mindset of many staff members who
assumed that because students were being thoroughly screened at the checkpoints,
weapons could not be brought into the schools. While running school employees
through a variety of video and audio school crisis scenarios, our analysts noticed a pronounced tendency for many staff to respond to scenarios involving
individuals who were depicted as brandishing weapons by replying
that the incidents being simulated were not possible at their school.
When told to assume that the incidents depicted had occurred in spite
of the weapons screening program, a number of staff were unable to
describe any action steps for the events. Our experience indicates that
at least part of the problem was that staff had not thought about the
possibility of these types of events taking place, even though there had
been problems with weapons in the schools they worked in.
IDENTIFY AND CORRECT GAPS
This type of situation is just one example of how dangerous
unidentified gaps in school security can be. School leaders should
continually seek to identify and correct gaps between what is really
in place and what students and staff assume is in place. There are
a number of ways to actively seek out and identify school security
gaps. School security assessments performed by experienced
external school security experts are often one of the most reliable
ways to identify gaps that can be easily overlooked by internal
personnel. There are also a variety of internal approaches to help
identify and correct these types of gaps before someone gets hurt.
PHOTO © SARI ONEAL
CREATE A CULTURE OF SCHOOL SAFETY TO PREVENT GAPS
School security technologies, security hardware, policies, practices
and procedures can help reduce the risk that school security
incidents will occur. However, each of these approaches can break
down if staff and in some cases, students do not understand the
importance of properly implementing or supporting them. School
security personnel often describe challenges they face in getting
other school employees to follow proper school security practices.
Interesting, actionable and factually accurate staff development
efforts and effective communications can help to address these
concerns. Perhaps most importantly, building administrators
must demonstrate that these efforts are a real priority. One of the
common denominators of safe schools is strong, clear and consistent
leadership which demonstrates to staff that school security is
a real priority.
PERFECTION IS NOT REQUIRED
We sometimes encounter situations where school officials are
reluctant to implement particular security measures because they
are not 100 percent reliable. While approaches that do not provide
a viable return on the time, energy and/or funding required to implement them should be avoided, it can
be a mistake not to implement reasonable
steps to enhance security just because the
approach will not be foolproof.
Many safety incidents are likely prevented
by the repeated warnings to “mind
the gap”. While no school safety measures
are foolproof, reducing the gap between
perceived and actual levels of school
security can also reduce the likelihood that
security events will take place. Taking care
to mind the gap can help avert tragedy in
our school.
This article originally appeared in the issue of .
About the Author
Michael Dorn serves as the executive director for Safe Havens International, Inc., an IRS-approved, nonprofit safety center. He has authored and co-authored more than 20 books on campus safety. He can be reached through the Safe Havens website at www.safehavensinternational.org.