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In total, 145 schools across Michigan will receive grant funds.
Cass City Schools will be installing an electronic access system for its doors and upgrading its video surveillance system.
Texas requires schools to have emergency plans and conduct safety drills. But a lot of decisions about safety are left to school districts and charter schools.
How can University of Michigan bolster safety and security on campus in the wake of last week’s shooting at Michigan State University? It starts with self-evaluation, said Deputy Chief Melissa Overton of UM’s Division of Public Safety and Security (DPSS).
Two days after a shooter killed three and injured five at Michigan State University, an EdSurge reporter attended an active shooter training offered by the university where she is a grad student.
Universities are updating security measures across the state. Michigan State University has focused on building access, classroom and door locks, camera coverage expansion, and mandatory training to improve security.
Taking advantage of a mostly vacant campus, Clemson University officials teamed up with local emergency responders to host an “active threat” drill over fall break. It started with an emergency alert through the school’s email and texting notification system, and included actors posing as victims and perpetrators in the area around Tillman Hall.
Michigan State University students, faculty and staff now have access to online training intended to prepare them for an active shooter. And 82% of "identified" university classroom doors have new locks that are easy to use. But one year after a gunman killed three students and injured five other people in a campus attack, the voluntary training remains untaken by most in the MSU community.
Michigan State University (MSU) sent out an active violence training video to students. The 10-minute video helps emphasize the importance of the Run-Hide-Fight strategy in an active violent situation. The video shows MSU faculty and police explaining the steps students can take to defend themselves in the event of violence on campus.
The Charleston County School District (CCSD) in South Carolina, a Project Prevent grantee, recently adopted CASEL’s Reunite, Renew, and Thrive: Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) Roadmap for Reopening School.