Shoring Up Student Safety When Buses Don’t Show Up on Time—Or at All
Campus security starts on the school bus and there are technologies available to improve student safety during pickup and drop-off.
Campus security starts on the school bus and there are technologies available to improve student safety during pickup and drop-off.
Without DEI programs, schools and universities place the academic performance, mental health, and safety of their most vulnerable students at risk.
Regardless of an institution’s budgetary constraints, there are tried and true precautions that can be taken to better protect their campus.
Here are four tips for tightening up violence prevention and response plans to help your campus mitigate acts of violence against professors.
Questioning and challenging conventional wisdom and traditional school safety plans is essential to improving our response to active shooters and other threats.
While 42% of college students needed help for emotional or mental health problems in the last year, over 60% noted they’ve never received counseling or therapy.
In order to future-proof an organization, campus stakeholders must understand where to start and what the possibilities can be when it comes to managing access.
Building a staffing model that brings a part or full-time crisis planning position into the K-12 organizational structure will better protect schools.
Enhanced communications, increased accessibility, and improved discharge processes are some ways hospitals can show empathy and subsequently improve safety.
The number of metal detectors and screeners needed for a full screen of students is logistically nearly impossible and a cost-prohibitive task.