Only 25 percent of the students say they are not at all concerned about a shooting happening at their school.
- Boys were less concerned about a shooting at their school than girls (30 percent cf. 19 percent).
- 19 percent of the urban students said they were not concerned about school shootings, while 27 percent of the suburban and rural students said they were not concerned.
- 40 percent of those students who said they did not feel safe at school were extremely concerned or very concerned about a shooting. Even among those who said they felt “extremely safe” or “very safe” at school, 17 percent were extremely concerned or very concerned about the possibility of a school shooting.
Four questions – “There are kids at my school who I think might shoot someone,” “I know kids who could bring a gun to school if they wanted to,” “I have heard another kid talking about shooting someone at school,” and “I heard about someone who has made a plan to shoot someone at school” – tell us students’ perceptions of the likelihood of a shooting at their schools. We assume that students who said they are only somewhat safe or not at all safe at school, and who responded affirmatively to the other four questions, were from schools where deadly violence is more likely to occur than those where students disagree with the statements. |