Zero-tolerance measures can counteract what some experts consider a crucial tool for protecting students and the larger community.
After a former student killed six people last year at the private Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee, state leaders have been looking for ways to make schools safer. Their focus so far has been to ramp up penalties against current students who make mass threats against schools.
Months after the killings, legislators passed a law requiring students who make such threats to be expelled for a year (unless a school superintendent decides otherwise) and allowing schools not to enroll them afterward. This year, the legislature passed bills that make the offense a felony and that revoke driving privileges for a year.
But a large body of research shows these zero-tolerance measures are not the most effective way to prevent violence in schools. In fact, some experts say those measures can counteract what they consider a crucial tool for protecting students as well as the larger community: threat assessments. When carried out correctly, threat assessments sort out behavior intended to cause real physical harm from simply disruptive acts and provide troubled students with the help they need.
School shooting drills did not make schools safer.
Putting cops in schools did not make schools safer.
Metal detectors, backpack searches and backpack bans did not make schools safer.
Zero tolerance policies based on threat assessments did not make schools safer.
Anything but address the fucking elephant in the room.
I like how they are bringing the failed DARE program back.
I have friends that still have their D.A.R.E. shirts. Obviously, they imbibe cannabis.
I never would have noticed if it left. Every once and a while I see a new-ish police crusier with the D.A.R.E. wrap on it. The older ones just had a big sticker on the sides.
Look what I just discovered. Baffling.
https://darecatalog.com/
They clearly added ‘and violence’ to sound more legitimate.
Merchandising! Merchandising!