Brave Students and Timely Tips: Texting Successfully Alerts Educators in Utah

Roy Utah: Utah girl credited with alerting officials over alleged school bombing plot

Via StandardExaminer.net and MSNBC.msn.com

An appropriate follow-up to the previous post on anonymous tip lines is this report of a foiled plot to bomb a public school campus a few days ago.  It all began when a student received a text message from one of the suspected bombers that asked, “If I told you to stay home on a certain day, would you?”

And to everyone’s surprise and great relief, the student took the warning to the authorities.  At least three implications emerge from this event:

  1.  Educators become a valuable resource for school safety when they make themselves accessible to students in a manner that minimizes the anxieties of student who wish to approach them.  This is often spoken of as the “goodwill” factor in school safety.  It cannot be minimized.
  2.  Students are imminently capable of making mature decisions about people and situations that require intervention for the greater good of campus safety.  Educators are wise to promote campus safety in a manner that encourages students to take ownership for their role in protecting the campus climate.
  3. The profile of the so-called “rampage student” is inherently unreliable and rather dynamic across the spectrum of students.  Stereotypic thinking about students is as likely to be a catalyst to rage incidents as of angry behavior.  The safest campus is likely to be one in which student concerns and needs are individualized by properly trained educators.