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- Fast Facts: School safety and security measures (334)
The largest increases over this period were for using security cameras to monitor the school (from 61 to 93 percent); and providing a structured anonymous threat reporting system 3 (from 36 to 62 percent)
- Ten Community Schools to Pilot Alternative Assessments
On top of state and federally mandated testing, the district imposes its own additional testing mandates that take away from valuable learning time where educators have more autonomy to tailor instruction for their students’ unique needs, abilities, and learning styles
- A District’s Experiment: What Happens When Schools Do Less Testing?
The Los Angeles Unified School District will allow up to 10 of its full-service community schools to opt out of all standardized tests that aren’t required by state and federal laws,
- Duress Systems Recommendations White Paper | PASSK12
In this paper, we provide best practice guidance gathered from experts in the field to help those responsible ensure the system they deploy will be up to the task School district staff are experts in education, but it’s unreasonable to expect them to be experts in security systems, too
- Why students should be allowed to keep their cameras off during remote . . .
Use of surveillance software for proctoring tests remotely: Rather than subjecting students to highly invasive monitoring in pursuit of test security, schools and teachers should implement methods of assessment during remote learning that do not require surveillance spyware
- Systems Approach to Physical Security in K–12 Schools
Such an inte-grated approach can help stakeholders create safe and secure spaces for school communities and do not require that school principals, facility managers, or other teachers and staff become experts in physical security design and implementation
- School Safety and Security - U. S. Department of Education
Information about support for school safety and security, including resources related to mental health, violence prevention, substance abuse, and online safety
- Video Surveillance of Students (K-12) - School College Legal Services . . .
Accordingly, schools should limit use of video surveillance to situations when videotaping is justified and necessary Video surveillance should be limited to public areas like hallways, offices, classrooms, playgrounds, and school buses
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