As it works to heal from a school shooting, the Broward County, Fla., district plans to partner with an organization founded by parents whose children were killed in a 2012 school attack in Newtown, Conn., to help prevent future violence.
Sandy Hook Promise will bring two programs to Broward County, where 17 people died and 17 more were injured in a Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Superintendent Robert Runcie said on Twitter Tuesday.
The first program, , teaches students and teachers to recognize and respond to warning signs that a student may harm themself or others. The other program, , aims to banish social isolation by teaching students to reach out to peers and encouraging a 鈥渃ulture of inclusion鈥 within schools.
The organization worked with experts on violence and school climate to develop the programs in the wake of the 2012 shootings at Sandy Hook. Parents of some of the 26 victims there were surprised to learn that, contrary to popular narratives, school shooters rarely 鈥渏ust snap.鈥 Rather, an analysis by the U.S. Secret Service has found that mass shooters often 鈥渓eak鈥 their intentions beforehand, often telling one or more people of their plans to act.
澳门跑狗论坛鈥檚 Lisa Stark reported this piece about the Sandy Hook Promise programs last year, on the fifth anniversary of the Newtown shootings.
Schools Look for Warning Signs of Violence
Broward County鈥檚 adoption of the programs comes as schools around the country include efforts to improve students鈥 ability to 鈥渟ee something, say something鈥 in the wake of the shootings in Parkland and Santa Fe, Texas, earlier this year. The federal STOP School Violence Act, signed into law by President Donald Trump as part of a spending bill, includes funding for such training.
Schools are also grappling with how to handle such reports when they are made. In Broward County, for example, people did 鈥渟ee something and say something,鈥 but some of the victims鈥 families have said officials weren鈥檛 quick enough to act.
Law enforcement officials and state investigators have said the Parkland shooter displayed many warning signs, even openly talking about becoming a school shooter. The FBI drew anger from the community after it revealed in the days after the shooting that it failed to investigate tips warning that the gunman intended to act. And a state task force assembled to investigate the attack is reviewing records, including school discipline records and dozens of police calls to the gunman鈥檚 home in the years before the attack.
Photo: A Broward County sheriff鈥檚 deputy stands watch at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., as students returned to class after a February school shooting. --Terry Renna/AP