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CT Teacher Puts Lessons Aside to Talk About Shooting

A storefront in the Sandy Hook borough of Newtown, Connecticut.Yasmeen KhanA storefront in the Sandy Hook borough of Newtown, Connecticut.
Question How are you talking about the Sandy Hook shooting in classrooms?
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Dec. 17, 2012, 10:16 a.m.

Students and school staff around the country are back in their classrooms today and will try to talk through Friday’s mass school shooting in Newtown, Conn. The shooter killed 26 people, including 20 first-graders, at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

WNYC’s Brigid Bergin reports Monday that Kyle Mangieri, a seventh grade social studies teacher in Fairfield, plans to set aside his current geography lessons to allow students the chance to openly discuss the shooting. Mangieri, who is 27 and lives in Sandy Hook, said he knows his students will have questions. Bergin writes:

On Monday, Mangieri will leave his home in Sandy Hook and head back to his Fairfield classroom. His superintendent sent out an email over the weekend telling teachers–things will be a little different.

He has to go to school extra early so teachers can meet first with guidance counselors. Then, all the teachers will be positioned at the doors to meet the students.

“Once school begins and all the students are in, every single door will be locked,” Mangieri said. “That was never the case before.”

Listen to Bergin’s full story as it aired on NPR’s Morning Edition.

SchoolBook wants to know what the conversations are in New York City classrooms. Please share your comments below.

Yasmeen Khan is a producer at WNYC. Follow her on Twitter @yasmeenkhan

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Daniela Grigorova December 18, 2012, 2:17 AM

As any deed of a sick person this accident is not explainable, so with my 13 year old I just stated the facts and mentioned that unfortunately it could happen in any school; with my 4 years old I didn't touch the subject directly, but I mentioned that if some unknown person wants to scare her while at daycare she can hide in a school locker. No parent can type this without crying on the helpless situation of the past shooting. And asking how we explain to kids does not help anybody because the next time when a mass shooting happens it will be under different circumstance. It is right to pay attention to how the weapons are handled by the people possessing them, because it is a big responsibility to care for a weapon and it should be acknowledged.

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John Giambalvo December 20, 2012, 2:43 AM

I'm a high school social studies teacher, so my first instinct was to engage my students in discussion around a current events lesson. We read a Times piece about an elementary school shooting in California in 1979, then made connections between that shooting and Friday's event.

I quickly discovered that my lesson was misplaced. My students, many of whom have younger brothers or sisters (and all of whom are very empathetic by nature), seemed to feel a strong personnel connection to what happened on Friday. Many of them spoke of concerns for younger school children the same age as the younger members of their family.

As odd as it may sound, I sensed that their concerns over the shooting were stronger -much stronger, in fact- than their concerns over the storm that effected us all seven weeks ago. Of course, it had been a full week after the storm before teachers met with their students -more than enough time for the initial shock to subside (the feelings from Friday's shootings are still very much new for all of us -students as well), so maybe that accounts for it.

As a teacher, I'm (very much) looking forward to getting some perspective on the event and doing another current events lesson sometime after the new year.

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