Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • WBEN 930AM

    Latest school shooting gives pause to start of new school year in Western New York

    By Susan Rose,

    12 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=47bV2H_0vLkWzVG00

    Hamburg, N.Y. (WBEN) "I have real mixed emotions today. There's nothing like the first day of school, but it's tragic that we have to have this conversation when these things happen." Hamburg School Superintendent Michael Cornell talking with WBEN the day after the latest school shooting outside of Atlanta, Georgia.

    Cornell said so much of what educators do is making sure that schools are safe.

    He said two things come to mind when it comes to school shootings.

    "You have to harden the target and soften the environment."

    By that, he means adding resource officers, having a police presence,
    increasing physical barriers, that are seen and unseen, to make it difficult
    for someone to get into schools.

    "But," he added, "you also have to soften the environment. Joy, value and connection have to be a feature of every school day for every child."

    Cornell said so many young people today suffer from loneliness, and anger that comes from that. Many young people also suffer from mental illness, not just school age, but young people from 18 to 30.

    "The cadence of violence in our schools and our society is likely to continue until we meaningfully address the epidemic of mental illness."

    Does the latest school shooting change his opinion about a possible cell phone ban in school?

    Reports from the Georgia shooting indicated students were texting their parents while being barricaded in their classrooms.

    Cornell said he has never been a fan of a one size fits all approach to cell phones in school.

    "I think districts have done a very good job of limiting cell phone use In grades K through 8 cell phones are tucked away in a locker or cubby. They're not allowed to be out. At the high school we spend a lot of time teaching time and place. It's a life skill. You have to figure out time and place with cell phones and social media when they're at college or in the workplace."

    Cornell has never been in favor of an outright cell phone ban for a lot of reasons, including what happened in Georgia.

    Enforcement, he noted, is an entirely separate issue. "We had a hard time for 25 or 30 years banning hats, and now we're going to try to ban cell phones?"

    He said you're going to chase that all day long and you're going to fray relationships between students and teachers and parents and administrators. "I don't think the juice is worth the squeeze."

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local Atlanta, GA newsLocal Atlanta, GA
    Most Popular newsMost Popular

    Comments / 0