Talking to kids about school shootings. Be truthful and follow their lead
By Katia Riddle and Allison Aubrey
It won't happen here. Not at your school. These are the kinds of reassurances that parents want to give their children when something as horrific as a school shooting happens. But here's the problem in the United States: It could happen.
School shootings have risen sharply in recent years, according to data from the American Academy of Pediatrics. According to an analysis from CNN, there have been 44 school shootings this year. The Washington Post has collected data showing more than 400 school shootings since the Columbine High School shooting in Colorado in 1999.
And every time a school shooting happens, like in Minneapolis on Wednesday, parents and teachers struggle to calm children's anxieties. So what should you say to children when a shooting happens?
Start by asking your child what they've heard, says David Schonfeld, a pediatrician who directs the National Center for School Crisis and Bereavement at Children's Hospital Los Angeles.
"Children's questions may be very different from adults'," Schonfeld says. And the best way to determine how much information they need is to listen to them.
"Before we can offer reassurance or help them with what's bothering them, we have to understand what their actual concerns are," Schonfeld says. His group has developed guidelines for talking to children after a tragic event.
Kids often ask who is to blame, what could have been done to prevent the tragedy or could it happen at my school? Truthful answers are important to build trust. And the unfortunate answer is that although school is typically a safe place, there are risks.
"We can help kids learn to cope with the distress that they feel when they recognize inherent dangers that are part of the world," Schonfeld says.
A child's age will determine how much information to share, but that's not the only factor. Their emotional reaction may be linked to how much trauma they've experienced in the past or how closely they're connected to a tragedy. If victims were their peers, the event will take a stronger emotional toll than it will with children who hear about the shooting in the news. Regardless, it will take time for parents to comfort children and help them process such tragic events.