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Surviving An Active Shooter The ‘Run, Hide, Fight’ Strategy For The Lockdown Generation

Run, Hide, Fight' strategy

Run, Hide, Fight' strategy

Surviving An Active Shooter The ‘Run, Hide, Fight’ Strategy has become very Common In the Lockdown Generation. The terror instilled by a “Run, Hide, Fight” alert is not limited to Michigan State, where a gunman fatally shot three students as they barricaded doors and raced across campus in search of safety. Most students in the lockdown generation are familiar with the strategy, which follows best practices developed by the Department of Homeland Security.

It holds that when a shooter is nearby, people should only fight as a last resort and only if confronted by a shooter.
However, when it is used, the results can be traumatic.

After a shooting last fall at the University of Virginia, a campus alert to “RUN. HIDE. FIGHT.” sent students scurrying inside laboratory closets and darkened dorm rooms. Many were veterans of lockdown drills from their elementary school days.

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Still, actually hiding for hours was terrifying, said Shannon Lake, a third-year student from Crozet, Virginia, who spent 12 hours sheltering, much of it in a darkened, barricaded storage closet in the business school.

“That was probably the most horrifying time because it became more real to us,” she said in November.

At colleges and elementary schools, “Run, Hide, Fight” goes under various different names. But the theme is the same: Get out of harm’s way, hide or barricade, and if an enemy finds you, take action. Backers believe it gives individuals a proactive list of options that go beyond the typical lockdown approach.

Run, Hide, Fight’ strategy

Many People Think It’s Not A Good Idea To Fight Back

But others argue it’s wrong to educate pupils, especially younger ones, to fight back. Some school safety experts think it needlessly puts students in danger, and opponents push for stricter lockdown policies and better training for school safety staff.

Below you can see a tweet about the matter

How to respond to a school shooter is a frightening conversation to have at any level, said Joseph Erardi, who was superintendent in Newtown, Connecticut, for four years after a gunman killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
“What we’ve learned over time is to offer staff and students as many options as possible at the moment,” Erardi said in 2019, after a cluster of school and college shootings. “You never want to take that common sense factor out.”

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In the last few years, some companies have invented panic buttons and begun deploying live-streaming cameras on classroom tablets or computers so police officers can see inside in real time if a gunman enters a school.

And across the nation, 911 call centers have slowly been working to offer text-to-911 features and the ability to secretly give information to police. We used various sources including abcnews.com to collect information about the incident.

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