Responding to a Death
Tips
for Administrators
- Review
crisis plan with all school staff.
- Verify
the facts and communicate them to all staff (utilize calling tree, memorandums,
faculty meetings). Provide teachers an opportunity to vent and process
their own feelings and concerns.
- Provide
update information to all staff.
- Increase
visibility of all staff in hallways. Meet and greet all students at building
entrances and at buses as they arrive. The visibility of school personnel
will be comforting to parents when they bring their children to school
and to students when they get off the buses.
- Provide
extra security.
- Provide
direction to all teachers on how to implement lessons, etc.
- Communicate
to all staff the need to take all threats of violence seriously and report
them to administrators.
- Do
not hesitate to hold a well-planned parent meeting to reassure parents
of their children's safety and to outline all school safety procedures.
- Expect
parents to express concern. Provide them with information about the Teachable
Moment lesson plan and specific activities being implemented in your school. Parents
want to know how to assist their children; therefore, administrators are
encouraged to send helpful information home to parents encouraging them
to visit school.
- Set
the tone with carefully prepared and rehearsed PA messages to reassure
students of their safety and encourage their participation in the lesson.
- Monitor
implementation of the lesson plan in all classrooms.
- Guide
school/student activities to prevent tragedies and to assist affected communities.
- Utilize
all school and community mental health resources such as counselors, social
workers, psychologists, hospital workers, clinics and churches.
- Establish
a school safety task force that includes students, teachers, and parents.
- Recognize
that issues surrounding school safety may conflict with American Civil
Liberties Union viewpoints about the constitutional rights of students. Central
office personnel and school attorneys should be consulted on these issues. The
A.C.L.U. has commented that school safety does not come before the rights
of students.
- If
the death was a suicide, review postvention recommendations from the American
Association of Suicidology, phone; 202-237-2280.
Tips for Teachers
- Recognize
the importance of providing students with the facts; give them opportunities
and permission to express a range of emotions. Remember that typical children's
reactions to a crisis are the following: fear of the future, behavioral
and academic regression, and sleeping disorders.
- Implement "Teachable
Moment" lesson taking care to select those objectives and activities that
are suitable to the incident and your students.
- Refer
any students with extreme emotions to counselors. Refer any students who
threaten violence or condone it to assistant principals!
- Teachers
should view themselves as the facilitator rather than the expert and should
ask open-ended questions after they briefly review the facts. Maintain
classroom control and guide the discussion. It is recommended that all
participants be in a circle. There is no answer, but each student should
have the opportunity to share his/her views. Emphasis should be placed
primarily on your students' reactions and what can we do as a class and
society - not on analyzing the suspected perpetrators. Key questions to
ask are the following:
- Where
were you when you first heard of this tragedy and what were your sensory
perceptions?
- What
was your first thought? Worst thought?
- What
are you worried about right now?
- What
would make you feel safer?
- When
you have had to deal with bad things in your life before, what helped you
to cope?
- Utilize
age appropriate language and recognize developmental differences such as
the following:
- Early elementary children
need reassurance that they are safe, as are adults who care for them. They
need assurance that the daily structures of their lives will not change. Play
activities and drawings/artwork are especially helpful to express emotions
at this age level.
- Upper elementary and early middle
school will be more vocal in asking questions
about whether they truly are safe and what is being done at their school. They
may need assistance separating reality from fantasy. Group or classroom
discussions should work well with this age group.
- Upper middle school and high school will have strong and varying opinions
about the causes of violence in schools and society. They will share
concrete suggestions about how to make school safer and how to prevent
tragedies in society. They will be more committed to doing something
to help the victims and affected community. Group discussion and writing
projects will be very effective. Some students may feel the need to
express themselves through dramatic role-play, art, music and video projects,
and community service.
- Monitor
and guide student projects to assist affected families and focus on violence
prevention activities.
- Keep
administration informed of results of lesson as well as follow-up activities.
©2003,
National Association of School Psychologists, 4340 East West Highway
#402, Bethesda, MD 20814, 301-657-0270, www.nasponline.org