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Jaclyn Schildkraut; Amanda B. Nickerson; Matt Vogel; Abbie Finnerty – Journal of School Violence, 2024
Although lockdown drills are a practice widely used in K-12 public schools across the United States to prepare students and staff to respond to acts of violence, research has only just begun to consider the impacts of these practices on those who participate in them. This study adds to the growing body of literature by examining the potential…
Descriptors: Violence, School Safety, Emergency Programs, Drills (Practice)
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Schildkraut, Jaclyn; Nickerson, Amanda B.; Ristoff, Thomas – Journal of School Violence, 2020
Despite their proliferation in schools across the U.S., the impact of lockdown drills on students remains largely understudied. Despite their goal of preparing students -- along with teachers and school staff -- for situations like the 2018 shooting in Parkland, FL, questions have been raised in both the public and academic discourses about…
Descriptors: Violence, School Safety, Emergency Programs, Fear
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Egnoto, Michael J.; Griffin, Darrin J.; Svetieva, Elena; Winslow, Luke – Journal of School Violence, 2016
Emergency response systems can be improved by investigating the motives and manner in which people share information during an active shooter crisis. This article analyzed survey data collected from undergraduate participants at The University of Texas at Austin who were enrolled during the fall of 2010 when an active shooter event occurred on…
Descriptors: Suicide, Violence, School Safety, Information Dissemination
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McIntyre, J. J.; Spence, Patric R.; Lachlan, Kenneth A. – Journal of School Violence, 2011
Prior research in responses to crisis and emergency messages has indicated that while the acquisition of information is critical in reducing anxiety and stress, informational needs and associated emotional reactions on the part of men and women may be quite different. This survey study revealed that responses following a campus shooting in 2008…
Descriptors: Surveys, Emergency Programs, Coping, Gender Differences