Can school shootings be prevented?
Twenty years after two teenage gunmen fatally shot 12 students and 1 teacher at Columbine High School in Littleton, the question remains an urgent one in a country that saw 97 acts of school gun violence in 2018 alone.
The answer, according to researchers at the Ƶ Boulder’s , is an unequivocal “yes.”
They’ve spent decades studying the roots of youth violence, and estimate that translating the lessons they’ve learned so far into action could eliminate 30 percent of violent incidents in schools today.
But the solutions aren’t simple, and implementation has been slow to arrive.
“We already know what works,” said CSPV Director Beverly Kingston, who will present this research April 16 at Uniting to Prevent School Violence, a day-long conference at the Ƶ Anschutz Medical Campus. “The question now is: How do we take what we have learned and help schools put it into practice?”
Calling out red flags
In 2018, the CSPV, which is part of the Institute of Behavioral Science (IBS), partnered with the Colorado Attorney General’s office to co-author the , a 145-page resource spelling out research-based recommendations. The guide outlines how to create a safer school by identifying and supporting troubled teens and preventing them from acting out violently, and offers response and recovery procedures for when the unthinkable occurs.
Who: Open to the public
What: Uniting to Prevent School Violence
When: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 16
Where: Ƶ Anschutz Medical Campus: Education 2 South Auditorium
Fee: $25 general; $15 students
The recommendations date back to the 2001 Columbine Review Commission report, a detailed analysis of what at the time was the worst school shooting in U.S. history.
“There had been a few mass shootings before then, but Columbine surpassed everything that was imagined in terms of what could happen in schools,” recalls Kingston. “It was a horrific call to action.”
Early on, one reality became clear: School shootings are almost always planned ahead of time.
One study of school shootings found 81 percent of attackers told someone about their plan, and 93 percent exhibited strange behavior or other “red flags.”
With this in mind, the nonprofit Safe2Tell Colorado launched in 2004, offering an anonymous 24-hour tip-line in which citizens can alert law enforcement to such warning signs.
Since its inception,more than 1,500planned school attacks have been averted. Now, other states are beginning to replicate the program.
“A lot of times someone hears or sees something that doesn’t seem right, and they don’t know who to call or how to report it,” said Kingston. “This provides an opportunity to intervene.”
Improving communication
In 2016, the CSPV published an independent fact-finding report about the Arapahoe High School shooting in Centennial, Colo., shedding even more light on what schools can do.
Senior Claire Davis was killed in the December 2013 shooting. The perpetrator - a troubled fellow student - died after turning the gun on himself. Bill Woodward, director of training and technical assistance at CSPV, sat in on hours of emotional depositions from witnesses before co-authoring the report.
“We found there were 27 missed opportunities that could have changed the course of events that led to Claire’s death,” he said.
Among them: School employees didn’t build a safety and support plan for the shooter after hearing of incidents of elementary school violence; follow up on reports of him bullying and being bullied; suspend him for threatening the librarian; or inform the school’s threat assessment team after learning about his viewing of guns and mass shootings online.
“You had a lot of individual people with individual pieces of information about him, but it was not being shared with others,” said Woodward.
The takeaways: School employees should err on the side of sharing information with each other and with law enforcement, and leaders should foster a culture in which everyone owns school safety.
“The safety of a school is not the sole responsibility of the school resource officer or the assistant principal. It is the responsibility of everyone, from the janitor to the librarian to the principal,” said Woodward.
Creating a safer school climate
While better communication can have a huge impact, Kingston stresses that the true key to preventing school shootings long-term is to change school culture in the United States.
“There are a lot of hurting kids out there,” she said.
National statistics show that 20 to 25 percent of middle school students report being bullied in the past 30 days, 17 percent of high school kids have considered suicide in the past year, 23 percent of high school students report being in a physical fight in the past year and 5 percent report bringing a gun to school.
To provide greater social and emotional support for both students and staff, the CSPV has rolled out numerous programs including Safe Communities Safe Schools—a comprehensive school safety program which is being implemented in 44 Colorado middle schools so far. Meanwhile, provides a list of scientifically-vetted programs for addressing things like bullying, depression and substance abuse in schools.
“True prevention is working upstream, intervening at the earliest point possible to prevent any child from ever wanting to do something violent,” said Kingston, who believes more money should be allocated to help already-overstretched schools shift their culture. “To get there will be a significant investment, but in the end it will save lives.”