(Statistics updated June 17, 2022) Dec. 1, 2021 – Hoover, Ala. – The National Association of School Resource Officers (NASRO) today expressed its sincere condolences to the Oxford, Michigan community in the wake of yesterday’s tragic shooting at Oxford High School. The organization of school resource officers (SROs – sworn law enforcement officers assigned to work in schools) also offered information it believes will help schools throughout the country prevent or mitigate future school violence.
While shootings in schools are rare, many signs indicate a significant increase in school violence during the 2021-2022 academic year:
-
Between August 1, 2021, and May 31, 2022, at least 132 incidents of gunfire on school campuses resulted in death or injury, according to data compiled by the nonprofit organization Everytown for Gun Safety and analyzed by NASRO. During the same period in 2019-2020, Everytown for Gun Safety recorded 65 such incidents. During the same period in 2018-2019, Everytown for Gun Safety recorded 62 such incidents.
-
Between August 1, 2021 and May 31, 2022, at least 313 incidents occurred in which a gun was brandished, was fired or a bullet hit school property for any reason, according to the K-12 School Shooting Database compiled by the Naval Postgraduate School’s Center for Homeland Defense and Security (CHDS) and analyzed by NASRO. During the same period in 2019-2020, the CHDS database recorded 160 such incidents. During the same period in 2018-2019, it recorded 103 such incidents.
-
During calendar year 2021, 34 shootings in which at least one person suffered a bullet wound happened on K-12 school property or on school busses, according to a list compiled by Education Week. As of June 17, 2022, 27 such incidents had occurred during calendar year 2022.
-
Since the beginning of the 2021 school year, daily news reports have indicated fights between students, many of which required law enforcement intervention and some of which resulted in significant injuries.
-
Every school day, news outlets around the U.S. report students found in possession of firearms on campuses. These incidents are occurring in elementary, middle and high schools.
“These statistics are unfortunately not a surprise,” said Mo Canady, NASRO’s executive director.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned in a May, 2021 bulletin that violence might increase when students returned to school after the pandemic’s shut downs. The Department noted risk factors including increased isolation during online or hybrid education and students’ inability to receive mental health services they would normally get at school. In addition, some students were stuck in abusive homes while schools were closed, Canady added.
But Canady said there are ways schools and communities can prevent or mitigate violence in schools.
“Schools should create and deploy threat assessment and management teams that identify students of concern, assess the risk of those students engaging in violence or other harmful activities and deliver intervention strategies to manage those risks,” Canady said. “Such teams should include carefully selected, specifically trained SROs. The goal is to identify students in distress before their behavior escalates to dangerous levels.”
Well-founded SRO programs that adhere to nationally accepted best practices help prevent school violence, Canady said. “SROs develop trusting relationships with students that encourage them to report important warning signs,” he added.
Canady said that it is impossible to prevent all school violence, regardless of how well schools follow recommendations. When violence cannot be prevented, Canady said, SROs can respond to, and end it, more quickly and more effectively than school staff members or police who respond from off campus.
“The sooner a law enforcement officer confronts an attacker, the sooner the attack can be stopped, thus reducing the number of victims,” Canady added.
About NASRO
NASRO is a nonprofit organization for school-based law enforcement officers, school administrators, and school security and safety professionals working as partners to protect students, school faculty and staff, and the schools they attend. NASRO is headquartered in Hoover, Alabama, and it was established in 1991. For more information, visit www.nasro.org.
Media Contact:
Jay Farlow
Jani Spede Public Relations
[email protected]
(866) 923-9980 ext. 2

