Opinion
School Climate & Safety Opinion

To Make Schools Safe, Make All Children Visible

By Sam Chaltain — October 24, 2006 5 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

On the same day this month that U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings opened a Bush administration summit on school violence, newspapers across the country reported a fourth outbreak of such violence in two weeks.

Two 6th grade students at Weston High School in Cazenovia, Wis., cry during a candlelight vigil held Sept. 29, after the school's principal was fatally shot by a 15-year-old student.

This time it was in Joplin, Mo., where a student gunman, just 13 years old, was wearing a dark green trench coat and carrying an assault rifle. “Please don’t make me do this,” the boy said before firing a shot into the ceiling. Police said he had a “well thought-out plan” to terrorize his school.

“All of us who are parents know it’s frightening,” said Secretary Spellings, explaining the need for the Oct. 10 school safety summit and urging schools to make sure they have a response plan for crises—and that “every single person who needs to know is aware of what the plan is.”

As school leaders heed the secretary’s important advice, I implore them to think deeply about this issue—and about what their schools can do to help keep people safe. Although physical violence of this nature is exceedingly rare in schools, the conditions that lead up to shootings by students are not.

For the long term, supportive communities are not built on fear and metal, but on strong relationships, social trust, and a commitment to give all children the skills and self-confidence they need to be visible to others in meaningful, responsible ways.

Visibility is a crucial metaphor for school safety because it reminds us that all young people need to learn how to be constructively “seen” and heard, and it encourages us to work toward “seeing” a shared vision of the future, one that reconnects to our country’s founding idea of a nation committed to individual freedom, social justice, and equality of opportunity for all.

Today, too many children attend school each day with the horrible certitude of their own invisibility. Each April 20, we mark another anniversary of the Columbine massacre—our country’s most violent example of what happens when students who feel silenced and marginalized undertake the most destructive of means to become visible to others.

Student-led violence should remind us that if we fail to equip future generations of Americans with the skills they need to make themselves visible to others our schools remain vulnerable to the rampages of our most disaffected citizens.

This is a problem that runs far deeper than the 1999 shootings at Columbine High School or more recent attacks. Flash back to March of this year, for example, when students in France took to the streets to protest a proposed new employment law—later withdrawn by the government in the face of overwhelming pressure. You’ll recall that alarming numbers of France’s young people were unemployed, and that, as of March 30, two-thirds of its universities were overrun by students, on strike, or closed.

In an article from that day’s edition of the British newspaper The Guardian, one of the protest’s young leaders, a 17-year-old girl named Floréal Mangin, described waking up during the first few days of the protest to burned cars in her neighborhood. Often, she said, as she watched her classmates do it, she would think about what it takes to make someone reach that point. “They were destroying their own neighborhood,” she said, “smashing their families’ cars, but they had no other way of telling the world they existed.”

Her words should make us sit up and take notice. Like those French youths, Eric Harris, Dylan Klebold, and other youthful killers have lived in a world in which words and language were useless, unreliable tools. Their choices were different, but the motivation behind their destructive acts, it seems to me, was the same: They felt they had no other way of telling the world they existed. That’s a type of hopelessness that can only result in desperation, anger, and resignation. In fact, I was shocked to read later that the rallying cry for the young French protesters was not “What do we want? When do we want it?”—the familiar, optimistic refrain uttered at American rallies for decades. It was “We are disposable pieces of sh—!”

Each incident of student-led violence should remind us that if we fail to equip future generations of Americans with the skills they need to make themselves visible to others, or if—far worse—we simply do not value the inclusion of their voices to begin with, our schools and our society remain vulnerable to the rampages of our most disaffected citizens.

But how do schools create safer, more inclusive school cultures, and how do we ensure that all people have the understanding, motivation, and skills they need to become active, visible contributors to the common good?

We can begin by strengthening the following three arenas:

• Climate. Across the last three decades of research, studies have identified a strong relationship between school safety and the establishment of a modern code of discipline that is developed “bottom up” and includes the input of students, teachers, support staff, and parents. As the University of Delaware psychologist George G. Bear has written: “Self-discipline connotes internal motivation for one’s behavior, the internalization of democratic ideals, and is most evident when external regulations of behavior are absent.”

• Voice. Contrary to popular belief, our right to free speech is not the reason schools are unsafe. Properly understood and applied, it’s a powerful solution that can help lead to safer schools. But if we want students to develop a greater sense of identity and community, adults must be willing to help them discover, in an authoritative and caring setting, the power and uniqueness of their own voices, and to show them how to use those voices responsibly.

• Accountability. To become safer, more inclusive places to work and learn, schools must ensure that all people involved in schooling understand not just the importance of their individual rights, but also their civic responsibility to guard the rights of others—especially those with whom they most deeply disagree. In such a culture of civic accountability, how we debate, not just what we debate, becomes critical. And in an environment where everyone is afforded the same degree of respect, our most vulnerable children are less likely to feel isolated and invisible.

One of the great paradoxes of human beings is that we feel two pressing needs at the same time: for the freedom that comes from defining ourselves as individuals, and for the security that comes from feeling connected to one another. But these two impulses are not mutually exclusive. To join a community, we are not required to abandon the freedom to express our individuality. And to be free, we do not need to sacrifice the meaningful connections we make in our relationships with others.

This tension has important implications for schools, which often struggle to balance the need for individual freedom with the desire for a safe and orderly environment. But school leaders do not need to make this choice. Schools must be places that nurture our need for individual freedom as a means of forging stronger collective bonds, and environments that create unity in the interest of our diversity, instead of at the expense of it.

A version of this article appeared in the October 25, 2006 edition of Education Week as To Make Schools Safe, Make All Children Visible

Events

School Climate & Safety K-12 Essentials Forum Strengthen Students’ Connections to School
Join this free event to learn how schools are creating the space for students to form strong bonds with each other and trusted adults.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Assessment Webinar
Standards-Based Grading Roundtable: What We've Achieved and Where We're Headed
Content provided by Otus
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Reading & Literacy Webinar
Creating Confident Readers: Why Differentiated Instruction is Equitable Instruction
Join us as we break down how differentiated instruction can advance your school’s literacy and equity goals.
Content provided by Lexia Learning

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

School Climate & Safety Another State Will Let Teachers Carry Guns. What We Know About the Strategy
Tennessee lawmakers passed a bill allowing teachers to carry guns with administrators' permission a year after the Covenant School shooting.
5 min read
People protest outside the House chamber after legislation passed that would allow some teachers to be armed in schools during a legislative session on April 23, 2024, in Nashville, Tenn.
People protest outside the House chamber after legislation passed that would allow some teachers to be armed in schools during a legislative session on April 23, 2024, in Nashville, Tenn. Tennessee could join more than 30 other states in allowing certain teachers to carry guns on campus. There's virtually no research on the strategy's effectiveness, and it remains uncommon despite the proliferation of state laws allowing it.
George Walker IV/AP
School Climate & Safety Video WATCH: Columbine Author on Myths, Lessons, and Warning Signs of Violence
David Cullen discusses how educators still grapple with painful lessons from the 1999 shooting.
1 min read
School Climate & Safety From Our Research Center How Much Educators Say They Use Suspensions, Expulsions, and Restorative Justice
With student behavior a top concern among educators now, a new survey points to many schools using less exclusionary discipline.
4 min read
Audrey Wright, right, quizzes fellow members of the Peace Warriors group at Chicago's North Lawndale College Prep High School on Thursday, April 19, 2018. Wright, who is a junior and the group's current president, was asking the students, from left, freshmen Otto Lewellyn III and Simone Johnson and sophomore Nia Bell, about a symbol used in the group's training on conflict resolution and team building. The students also must memorize and regularly recite the Rev. Martin Luther King's "Six Principles of Nonviolence."
A group of students at Chicago's North Lawndale College Prep High School participates in a training on conflict resolution and team building on Thursday, April 19, 2018. Nearly half of educators in a recent EdWeek Research Center survey said their schools are using restorative justice more now than they did five years ago.
Martha Irvine/AP
School Climate & Safety 25 Years After Columbine, America Spends Billions to Prevent Shootings That Keep Happening
Districts have invested in more personnel and physical security measures to keep students safe, but shootings have continued unabated.
9 min read
A group protesting school safety in Laurel County, K.Y., on Feb. 21, 2018. In the wake of a mass shooting at a Florida high school, parents and educators are mobilizing to demand more school safety measures, including armed officers, security cameras, door locks, etc.
A group calls for additional school safety measures in Laurel County, Ky., on Feb. 21, 2018, following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., in which 14 students and three staff members died. Districts have invested billions in personnel and physical security measures in the 25 years since the 1999 shooting at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo.
Claire Crouch/Lex18News via AP