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School Climate & Safety

Ferguson-Area Schools Face 鈥楤alancing Act鈥 Amid Unrest

By Denisa R. Superville 鈥 August 22, 2014 9 min read
In this photo taken with a long exposure, protesters march in the street as lightning flashes in the distance in Ferguson, Mo.
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Schools in the Ferguson, Mo., area are walking a tightrope between returning to the routine of a normal year and acknowledging the street protests and larger debate about race and law enforcement sparked by the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer.

Next week is expected to be the first full week of classes for nearly all public school students in the area since a state of unrest complicated the start of the academic year for several districts.

Schools in and near the small city in St. Louis County have scrambled to make up for missed class time, address students鈥 anxieties over violent images they had seen on TV鈥攐r on their streets鈥攁nd provide lunches to the many students who qualify for subsidized meals.

In the 11,200-student Ferguson-Florissant school system, which is scheduled to start the new year on Monday, after thrice postponing it, teachers posted a 鈥淭eachers Here to Teach鈥 sign outside the local library this week and, along with volunteers, inside on things children otherwise would be doing in school鈥攔eading, writing, math, and art.

In the 2,500-student Jennings district, which borders Ferguson, more than 150 teachers spent Tuesday of this week , where they picked up discarded bottles, cans, and even tear-gas canisters. Officials of the Ferguson-Florissant and Jennings districts opened some buildings this week, though classes had been canceled, so that parents could pick up packed lunches for their children. And in the Riverview Gardens system, which was closed Monday and Tuesday, officials dispatched a refrigerated food truck to four locations so adults and children could pick up meals.

In the midst of all of this, school leaders were wrestling with the best way to approach what has turned into a national conversation about race, class, and justice in which , commentators, and ordinary citizens have become involved.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a balancing act. That鈥檚 probably the best way I can express it,鈥 said Grayling Tobias, the superintendent of Missouri鈥檚 18,000-student Hazelwood district, near Florissant but away from the immediate protests, which kept its doors open throughout the protests.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a balancing act between focusing on teaching and learning, and focusing on the current events that are happening in the city of Ferguson,鈥 he continued. 鈥淥ur students鈥 well-being and health and emotional state [are] primary, and our staff鈥檚 health, safety, and well-being鈥 are also high priorities.

Mental-Health Services

The tense situation in Ferguson鈥攁 city of about 21,000 where 67 percent of the population is black鈥攚as sparked by the Aug. 9 shooting of Michael Brown, an 18-year-old graduate of a public high school in Normandy, Mo. The circumstances surrounding his fatal shooting by Darren Wilson, a Ferguson police officer, remain in dispute.

Missouri Highway Patrol Captain Ron Johnson visits the Ferguson Public Library and talks with area students.

In the days after Mr. Brown鈥檚 death, protestors thronged the streets demanding the officer鈥檚 arrest. Peaceful protests have turned into violent episodes involving some participants, while local police have drawn criticism for what many residents and outside observers see as a heavy-handed response. In addition to local authorities, the FBI is conducting a criminal investigation, and the U.S. Department of Justice is looking into possible civil rights violations.

Recognizing a need for mental-health services for students and teachers affected by those troubling events, the Missouri education department on Aug. 21 hosted a training session for educators in districts near Ferguson, including Hazelwood, Jennings, Normandy, Riverview Gardens, St. Louis, and University City, as well as Ferguson-Florissant.

The daylong session was intended to help all educators鈥攆rom teachers to guidance counselors鈥攊dentify trauma signs, provide immediate assistance to students who are in distress, and spot those who may need extensive help.

The gathering was also an opportunity for educators to discuss how the events had affected them, according to Sarah Potter, a spokeswoman for the state education department.

In the immediate future, experts said, schools must address the emotional and mental-health needs of students who may have seen their own streets enveloped in billowing smoke as military-style vehicles rumbled through, whose family members may be law-enforcement officials working at the scene of the protests, or who may have known Michael Brown.

鈥淭he best thing that schools do is that we try to restore a sense of normalcy,鈥 said Sharon F. Sevier, the chairwoman of the board of directors of the American School Counselor Association and a school counselor in the Rockwood school district in St. Louis County.

鈥淪chool is the safe place,鈥 Ms. Sevier said. 鈥淲e have routines. We have expectations. All of those expectations, all of those routines are above board.鈥

She added: 鈥淜ids feel safe, generally, in schools, and so that鈥檚 what schools want to do. We want to get back to greeting the kids in the morning, to seeing them in the halls, to providing lunch for them, to teaching them.鈥

Adult Presence

With the near wall-to-wall media coverage of the events in Ferguson, it鈥檚 highly unlikely that area students are unaffected by or unaware of what鈥檚 happening, making the situation especially challenging for students and staff alike, said Melissa A. Reeves, an adjunct instructor of psychology at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, S.C., and a co-author of the National Association of School Psychologists鈥 prepare School Crisis Prevention and Intervention curriculum.

Experts recommend increasing adult presence on the first day of school after a traumatic incident. And they suggest that students should guide any discussion on the topic.

It鈥檚 better to let students talk about the situation if they want to, instead of holding a schoolwide discussion, Ms. Reeves said.

鈥淓specially with the younger kids, you want to let their questions be the guide and address the questions if they are coming up,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut if they are not asking a lot of questions, then it鈥檚 just important to continue on with your typical school day and give them a sense of normalcy.鈥

The school district can provide a script to teachers to help guide such a conversation, in the event that students want to talk about the protests, she said.

Teachers, Ms. Reeves said, can start the 鈥渟chool day validating that this is a tough situation, and that there is a lot of emotion, but what鈥檚 important is that when you are in this building, that every single student is physically and psychologically safe.鈥

In the Ferguson-Florissant district, which has 33 counselors on staff, the school system plans to make use of an additional 24 counselors鈥攑rovided by Great Circle, a St. Louis-based mental-health organization鈥攐n the first day of school.

Interim Superintendent Larry Larrew said that teachers and other educators will rely on the crisis training they received from the state this week.

Mr. Larrew said that he imagines the situation in Ferguson will require more extensive discussion on race and social justice鈥攁 conversation the district is already having and one that has been part of not just the city鈥檚 history, but also that of St. Louis County. Professional-development days will be used to develop strategies on delving into the issues of race and socioeconomics, he said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely a part of the conversation鈥攁ge, race, the roles of authority鈥攁ll of those are areas that schools can help with,鈥 Mr. Larrew said. 鈥淎nd they need to help because part of our function is to help in the development of students to become the adults that will contribute to society.鈥

In the 2013-14 school year, African-Americans made up 80 percent of the student population in the Ferguson-Florissant district, while about 12 percent of the students were white.

Students Protest

The Riverview Gardens school district, which has about 5,000 students, includes the area at the center of the protests: Some of its students walk past the memorial site to Mr. Brown on their way to school. The district was able to hold classes throughout the first week of protests that followed the Aug. 9 shooting, but canceled classes on Monday and Tuesday of this week after weekend unrest.

Riverview Gardens Superintendent Scott D. Spurgeon said he was concerned about the students who walked to school and about the difficulty buses had in reaching others because of roadblocks.

His students have also been involved in the protests; some were tear-gassed while demonstrating, he said. They have also been helpful in working to quell the violence, he said. About 20 high school students met with representatives from the state attorney general鈥檚 office and the Missouri State Highway Patrol to offer suggestions on how authorities could restore order while allowing peaceful protestors to exercise their First Amendment rights, Mr. Spurgeon said.

The district used the days off this week to provide staff members with training and resources on how to respond to students who may need help. Security has been reallocated to schools near the scene of the protests. And the district also asked the highway patrol to be present during mornings and afternoons while students are on their way to and from school.

So far, though, students appear to be doing well, Mr. Spurgeon said Thursday.

鈥淭here has been very little effects that we have seen from kids so far,鈥 Mr. Spurgeon said. 鈥淲hat I see is families and students that appear to be excited about coming back to school. That鈥檚 a tremendous improvement for us.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檝e had a few students that needed some conversations, that wanted to talk about [it],鈥 he added, 鈥渂ut for the most part, our kids and families appear to be happy to be returning to school.鈥

Community Service

In the nearby Jennings district, where 99 percent of students are African-American and most qualify for subsidized meals, Superintendent Tiffany Anderson and her staff used Tuesday to clean up the streets that have been littered by days of protests. The idea was to show students that they could help build their community through peaceful means. Next week, the district will hold a voter-registration drive at one of its high schools. Also, next Saturday the district plans to join with students from Washington University in St. Louis to paint murals as part of a community-building and beautification project.

Ms. Anderson said school staff members also held discussions this month with selected high school students on strengthening their communities and ways they could effect change through nonviolent means. For the most part, though, she said, the students who were part of the group were more excited about returning to school than with the events in Ferguson.

鈥淎s kids come back, we want to make sure that we are responsive鈥攁nd also proactive,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he proactive piece is just empowering our staff with ways to facilitate dialogue about community-building.鈥

A version of this article appeared in the August 27, 2014 edition of 澳门跑狗论坛 as 鈥楤alancing Act鈥 For Mo. Schools Amid Unrest

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