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Better security may not make schools safer

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In Ohio, about 6 percent of the state’s high school students missed at least one day of school last year because they feared for their safety, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 2011 Youth Risk Behavior Survey.

Almost a quarter of those students — 22.7 percent — said they had been bullied on school property, and about 9 percent said they had been involved in a fight at school.

Meanwhile, high school students are arming themselves at an alarming rate. More than 16 percent in Ohio said they carried a weapon in 2011, up from just over 4 percent in 2005, according to the survey.

School officials are quick to point out that statistically, schools are still the safest places for children — even safer than being at home. But a perception of danger — regardless of what the statistics say — can retard the learning process in a multitude of ways.

Addressing the concerns of children who feel unsafe should be priority for every school, said Springfield City School District Superintendent David Estrop.

School safety and student performance “go together hand in glove,” Estrop said, and taking steps to eliminate the threat of violence only enhances students’ ability to learn.

Estrop traces his district’s improvement in test scores — he said Springfield is the state’s only high-poverty urban district to be rated “effective,” or the equivalent of a “B” letter grade — to steps taken to improve the students’ environment for learning.

“We have improved over the last 10 years from what was an F, or academic emergency,” he said. “There’s no doubt in my mind we have made progress as a result of having good school environments where the children can focus and feel safe.”

Like many school districts, Springfield has installed high-tech security equipment, including surveillance cameras and a buzzer system for visitors. The district also employs a crew of school resource officers.

But Estrop attributes much of the school district’s success in safety control to a change in attitude among students, some of whom have established their own anti-bullying programs in the middle schools and high schools and are no longer reluctant to report threatening or suspicious activity by their peers.

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