Whenever I see this kind of talk about young people being anxious, having mental illness "due to social media" all I can think about is how silent and efficient my students are when we have "stay in place" drills.
They move quickly turning off lights & ringers on their phones, closing curtains, barricading & locking doors ... just as we taught them because that's the BEST we *the adults* could come up with as a response.
The kids are alright. It's us that needs to do better.
@futurebird @bjc @jeffjarvis are these drills like fire drills where everyone is all "there might be a fire drill today" and "oh there's the fire drill", or are they just randomly pretending the place is actually being attacked on a regular basis and then sometimes saying "oh yeah we lied"
school drills
They are drills. They know it's not real. That's why it's striking to me how seriously they take it. They know it *could* be real.
A voice comes on the PA: "Please stay in place, Please stay in place." No one is to make a sound after that as we get the room closed & everyone out of "line of sight" with all windows & doors.
When I was still using a cane & could not easily sit on the floor they helped me. And I tear up a little thinking about that.
re: school drills
re: school drills
@ajsadauskas @bjc @jeffjarvis @Forbearance @futurebird
There's another point that comparisons between countries often miss. In many countries you can obtain a license to own a firearm but many, even most, countries required that your gun(s) are locked away in secure storage separate from the ammunition which also has to be in secure storage.
Very few people indeed have the legal right to actually carry a loaded firearm on their person in public!