CHLLady wrote:I think it's a fantastic idea, as long as everyone participating knew it was a drill in adavance. I believe this is good for the students to hear what gun shots sound like in a school environment, so that they KNOW what they're hearing if it does happen. Too many times people freeze and try and rationalize what they thought they heard, some say firecrackers, a desk dropping, etc. People come up with weird ideas. If this can get them to react faster instead of freezing, then why not? In this training, they can use it in other situations such as movie theater or the mall. They are not going to be traumatized, they've seen worse in scary movies or on The Walking Dead, or in their video games.
I believe in teaching my kids about school safety and what to do in case... We've discussed this often. Kids need this training. Not all parents teach or expose their kids to gun safety & shooting, as most of us have taught our own. Our kids know what gun shots sound like. It's always better to be prepared.
I totally disagree. First of all the "guns" used in the video sound nothing like real guns. Secondly, getting a school full of kids, 750 in my case, to take any kind of drill seriously is next to impossible. Thirdly, there is absolutely no way you are going to get 10% of the parents to consent to allowing their kids to participate in this type of drill which negates any possibility of the general school population benefiting from the drill. Lastly, like I stated previously, some teenagers would take from this experience that their only chance of surviving an actual experience would be to carry "protection".
There is absolutely nothing to be gained in having children participate in a drill where they all die. In fact the drill is likely to make them panic more in a real event. Involving children on any large scale is just a bad idea.