Don't Draft Children to Fight School Shooters

Would you want your kids -- even as young as kindergarten age -- manning the frontlines during an attack? This practice is known as ALICE -- alert, lockdown, inform, counter, evacuate.
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Some of the weapons collected in Wednesday's Los Angeles Gun Buyback event are showcased Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012 during a news conference at the LAPD headquarters in Los Angeles. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's office says the weapons collected Wednesday included 901 handguns, 698 rifles, 363 shotguns and 75 assault weapons. The buyback is usually held in May but was moved up in response to the Dec. 14 massacre of students and teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
Some of the weapons collected in Wednesday's Los Angeles Gun Buyback event are showcased Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012 during a news conference at the LAPD headquarters in Los Angeles. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's office says the weapons collected Wednesday included 901 handguns, 698 rifles, 363 shotguns and 75 assault weapons. The buyback is usually held in May but was moved up in response to the Dec. 14 massacre of students and teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

In the news reports on the horrendous school shooting in Connecticut, the widely circulated photograph of children being led to safety by adults struck me. In it, students -- understandably visibly upset -- are evacuated in a line, hands on each other's shoulders, and moving under the direction and supervision of trained adults.

Imagine, in all unlikeliness, the worst.

An armed gunman. Your children's school. As a parent, your panic and anxiety are at unprecedented levels. Are your kids safe? Who's responding to the situation? What's happening?

Now imagine the students at your kids' school actively engaging and interacting with the gunman -- throwing objects, trying to confuse him, being assertive and putting themselves even more in the line of danger. Would you want your kids -- even as young as kindergarten age -- manning the frontlines during an attack?

This practice is known as ALICE -- alert, lockdown, inform, counter, evacuate -- and according to a recent article in the Boston Globe, more than 300 schools around the country have adopted its risky procedures, which include training children to intervene and participate in the event of a school shooting.

Conducting safety assessments is one of the critical components of my role as director of school-based programs for Cambridge Health Alliance. I advise administrative school officials and school districts on whether behaviorally challenged students are safety threats to others. As a psychiatrist and someone whose role is centered on the protection and best interests of students and schools, I am strongly against ALICE.

The recent indescribable tragedy notwithstanding, school shootings are rare, yet their horrors weigh on our consciousness. In reality, there's a microscopic chance that a school is going to be targeted. For this rarity alone, the ALICE procedures are jeopardous in that they give students, parents, and schools a false sense of security.

Say students undergo a weeklong training course that teaches them to respond in an armed attack, and suppose that attack does occur -- it's ludicrous to believe that after a few exercises a student will capably respond during a time of extreme confusion and duress. Students aren't being tested on their ALICE instruction; there's a reason that police and SWAT teams are paid to respond to these threats -- they undergo years of intense training.

I believe the ALICE methodology puts kids and schools more at risk. I would argue that a kid's provocations may make him more of a target. And what if he gets shot? This horrible incident then becomes a liability for schools that backed the training.

I appreciate how schools are thinking outside the box and want to respond appropriately in the event of emergencies. But we should focus on prevention, as well as reaction. It's important to acknowledge our collective anxiety around school shootings and to address it by identifying individuals who are marginalized or have aggression and amplify our interventions, not just diagnostically but with school and parental support.

Teachers and school officials have crisis plans already in place, and it's essential for schools to maintain up-to-date training and preparedness plans, such as evacuation routes. There are other effective measures to bolster security on school grounds, like adding a police detail, controlling access during school hours, and teaching kids not to open the door for strangers and to report suspicious activity to school officials. Disseminating vital school information, such as floor and preparedness plans, to third parties will aid first responders in the event of an emergency.

ALICE is a dangerous method plan that offers a false sense of confidence. This is familiar turf in our efforts to protect children. We installed the DARE program to prevent drug abuse, only to learn it doesn't work. We held suicide prevention rallies in school auditoriums, realizing later they may be a catalyst for already suicidal students. We banned long jackets, backpacks, and lockers, and now we want our kids to fight school shooters?

Let's protect students and focus on community engagement and prevention. When it comes to ALICE, let's keep her in Wonderland and out of our schools.

This piece is adapted from one previously published on WBUR's Commonhealth blog.

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