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Better security may not make schools safer

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“I think Columbine changed everything,” Estrop said. “Before Columbine, the norm among students is that you don’t talk. You don’t rat out anybody. If you were bullied, you didn’t say anything. Now, clearly, students have come to recognize that if they don’t speak up, they could be putting themselves and their friends in danger. And educators have become a whole lot better listeners.”

Tom Henderson, superintendent of Centerville City Schools, views the school district as its own ecosystem that requires the buy-in of parents, teachers and all other stakeholders to be effective in educating and protecting its students.

“Impressing upon your students that this is an educational community, and we’re all in this together is really paramount,” Henderson said. “When you build that kind of environment, that kind of situation where there is mutual respect by all, hopefully, that transcends into that feeling of safety.”

The safety concerns in Centerville might not be as pronounced as those in other school districts: “We can go months without anything ever being reported,” Henderson said.

But school officials remain vigilant, knowing that suburban districts have been the target in many school shootings. Fights, bullying and other intimidation tactics can get in the way of the learning process in any district.

“We work hard at making sure that we do everything we can,” Henderson said. “We’re ready to talk to students if they need to talk or to support them in any way they need support. I’d like to think students feel safe at our schools, and I’d like to believe that they understand student safety is our No. 1 priority.”

No matter how dedicated schools are about ensuring the safety of their students, the grim reality is that going to school — just like going to the mall, grocery store or movie theater — will always involve a certain level of risk, Muschert said.

“Statistically speaking, you’re more likely to get hurt in a car or in the bathtub” than at school, Muschert said. “But we’re not going to stop driving or using the bathtub because we have a risk tolerance for those activities.”

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