Surveys of more than 54,000 middle and high school students found
that the presence of security officers as well as outdoor cameras
made kids feel safer, according to the report published in the
Journal of Adolescent Health. But cameras indoors made them feel
more vulnerable.
"We've been focusing on physical safety in our schools, but we also
need to consider emotional safety," said the study's lead author,
Sarah Lindstrom Johnson of the School of Social and Family Dynamics
at Arizona State University in Tempe. "If we're not careful in our
efforts to improve physical security of our schools, there may be an
impact on students' emotional safety."
Lindstrom Johnson's study focused on 98 middle and high schools in
the state of Maryland.
Along with surveying the students, the researchers checked out the
security measures at the schools, counting the numbers of cameras
inside and outside and noting the presence of security officers.
When they analyzed the data, the researchers found, the higher the
number of cameras in a school, the less safe and supported the kids
said they felt.
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While cameras inside the school might have been installed for safety
reasons, students had the sense they were being spied upon,
Lindstrom Johnson said. "And the administrators did see an
additional benefit to these cameras in allowing them to see who
might be committing vandalism, cutting class and things like that,"
she added.
Given the way that students perceive indoor cameras, "administrators
and school districts need to be thoughtful about why and where they
are putting cameras," she said.
Intriguingly, indoor cameras were less likely to make black students
feel unsafe, Lindstrom Johnson said. "We think the reason may be
mimicking more the national movement of black youth recording
interactions."
Nonetheless, Lindstrom Johnson added, with no proof "that these
measures deter extreme school shootings, even peer to peer, a
community's money might be better spent providing emotional support
to students." There is evidence that support of this kind can reduce
violence, she noted.
"(The new findings show) that more security does not necessarily
mean that students feel safer," said Shannon Bennett, an assistant
professor of adolescent psychology and psychiatry and clinical
director of the youth anxiety center at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill
Cornell Medical Center.
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"There needs to be a balancing of the need to have some surveillance
of the environment with students' feelings of being watched. The
findings do suggest more work needs to be done to figure out how to
best create an optimal learning environment," said Bennett, who
wasn't involved in the study.
And while it's possible that indoor cameras could help with bullying
problems, there needs to be some clarification as to how the footage
is being used, Bennett said.
Perhaps the heart of the discussion should be the question of
whether the added security measures actually make students
physically safer.
Currently "there are few firm conclusions on the role of security
apparatus and school safety," said Aaron Kupchik, a professor of
sociology and criminal justice at the University of Delaware in
Newark, who also wasn't involved in the study. "Most find no effect
or detrimental effects from additional security measures."
And balanced against that is the impact on students' psyches. "If
security is implemented poorly they might feel policed rather than
protected; they might feel like they are viewed as criminals; they
might feel like prisoners," Kupchik said.
"The irony," Kupchik noted, "is that back in the 2000s a lot of
school administrators put in cameras and armed guards because they
didn't want another Columbine despite the fact that there were
cameras and armed guards at Columbine."
Some strategies can backfire, "if the students feel that they're
going into a hostile climate," Kupchik said.
"One thing research has shown, going back decades, is one way to
maintain safe schools is to have an inclusive school social
climate," Kupchik said. "That is, a school where students feel
valued and respected and included. The adults are still in charge
but the students feel cared for and connected. In those schools a
student is much less likely to hurt other people and one would think
there would be less of a chance of a school shooting by a student
for the same reasons."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2N4jgcc Journal of Adolescent Health, online
September 6, 2018.
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