Latest shooting could invoke memories from Newtown as school year begins

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With students set to return

to classes in the Culver City

Unified School District Monday,

Aug. 26, another school

shooting could revive memories

of the Newtown, Conn.

massacre following yet another

school shooting, this time in

Georgia.

Michael Brandon Hill, 20,

opened fire on students at Ronald

McNair Discovery Academy

near downtown Atlanta

on Aug. 20. He surrendered to

police hours after barricading

himself in the school’s main

office, according to DeKalb

County police.

No one was injured and

Hill faces charges including

aggravated assault on a police

officer, terroristic threats and

possession of a firearm by a

convicted felon. He was armed

with several weapons, including

an AK-47.

“Another tragic, senseless

act,” responded CCUSD Superintendent

David LaRose when

asked about the latest shooting

hours after it occurred.

Following the Dec. 14 Newtown

murders, when 20-year

old gunman Adam Lanza killed

20 elementary school students

and six adults at Sandy Hook

Elementary School, Culver City

and school districts around the

nation began to reevaluate and

upgrade their school safety

programs.

“We believe that safety is paramount

and is a daily endeavor.

Be it capital projects, staff training,

or partnering with city

agencies the topic of student

and staff safety is always an

area of focus,” La Rose said.

“We have continued purposeful

and strategic in our approach to

school, student and staff safety.”

Stephanie Mihalas, a

licensed child psychologist and

nationally certified school psychologist

who does research

on school violence and aggression,

said there can be built-in

unease for some children on the

first few days of school due to a

number of factors, and hearing

about another school shooting

can escalate their discomfort.

“A lot of children already

have increased anxiety because

they might be changing grade

levels, they might wonder if

their friends are coming back

to school or if they will be in

the same classes or if they

have a new teacher,” Mihalas

explained. “So their anxiety

level can peak if they hear about

another shooting.”

Culver City Unified School

District Board of Education

member Laura Chardiet, whose

two children attend the middle

school and the high school,

said the first thing she thinks

of when she hears about these

types of school tragedies are

her son and daughter. As a

mother, she says it is not always

easy to bifurcate her role as

a school policy maker and a

parent.

“It’s impossible for me to

make that separation,” said

Chardiet. “As a parent, you feel

that greater sense of urgency

for more safety.”

Some of the district’s most

recent efforts to enhance

school safety include the installation

of additional cameras at

campus entry points of the five

elementary schools, the installation

of new, more advanced

alarm system with a new monitoring

partner and a comprehensive

plan to provide security

coverage at the elementary

school sites has been developed

and will be implemented

after the construction and traffic

implications at Farragut

Elementary School, Culver City

Middle School and Culver City

High School are completed.

In addition, “active shooter

drill” training, in coordination

with Culver City Police Department,

took place Aug. 6-9 at the

high school. La Rose said district

administrators participated

in the training.

And earlier this year, a district

team of school site and district

administration and security

team members attended the

Fourth Annual School Safety

Conference.

“These are a few indicators

of our commitment to campus

and student and staff safety.

Training, practice, collaboration

with the city and communication

planning will be an

ongoing goal,” the superintendent

said.

Mihalas, who is also a clinical

instructor at The David Geffen

School of Medicine at UCLA

Department of Psychiatry and

Biobehavioral Sciences, said

parents can sometimes unwittingly

contribute to a child’s

anxiety by talking about a

shooting even though the child

is unaware of the event.

“The question parents

should ask themselves is ‘am

I doing this to ease my child’s

fear or am I doing this to ease

my own fears?’” she said.

Mihalas also indictaed that it

was natural to talk to children

in the aftermath of Newtown

due to the level of national

media coverage, which made it

nearly impossible for students

of all ages not to hear about the

tragedy.

But the Georgia shooting

has received less attention and

she does not think parents

should discuss it unless the

child brings it to their attention.

Regarding educators, it

should only be discussed if a

teacher observes certain behaviors

or a student mentions the

shooting. “In that case, the student’s

concerns should be validated

and discussed,” Mihalas

said.

Chardiet said the board

receives security updates from

Ted Yant, the head of the district’s

school resource officers.