Disaster Preparedness & Recovery

Mass Notification Layers Fail to Reach the Classroom
By: Timothy Means on July 08, 2011
Bookmark and Share


The two to six hours college students spend inside classrooms creates a sizeable gap in mass notification system coverage for most colleges and universities. To target and penetrate the protected learning environment, it is time for schools to employ the power and accuracy of precision notification systems.

The one area where the interests of education, technology and safety collide is in the university classroom. It is the heart of education, the core location where teachers and students engage in the symbiotic transfer of knowledge. Classrooms are single-purpose rooms dedicated to learning. The focus of the room is fixated on the teacher and the teaching experience. The classroom is also where you have anywhere from 10 to 100 or more people isolated from the outside world in a room with doors you can’t lock to keep danger out. In the eyes of campus safety experts, it’s the perfect setting for a potentially bad situation.

The two primary emergency notification system (ENS) issues inside the classroom arise by architectural design and classroom culture. It is a space architecturally designed to minimize distractions from the outside. There is also a long-standing culture enforced by teachers to minimize distractions inside classroom walls. The one-two punch of these two classroom dynamics has a big impact on the effectiveness of the methods used for emergency notification.


The Classroom Cocoon


A classroom’s actual architectural design is intended to insulate the occupants from outside noise and commotion. For example, look at these general specifications for classroom design:

Classrooms should be concentrated on the lower floors of buildings to provide easy access for general students, as well as the disabled and support services. The uses of adjacent spaces must be carefully chosen to avoid distracting noises and sounds. A classroom should not be adjacent to mailrooms, reception areas, dining facilities, restrooms, bicycle parking, loading docks, mechanical equipment rooms and other similar noise producing areas. It’s important to provide sound isolation from surrounding rooms that share common walls as well as direct air paths between rooms. To prevent unwanted noise transmission, classrooms and restrooms should not share common walls, floors or ceilings, or should be designed to minimize sound transmission between rooms.

It is clear that at the most fundamental level, the teaching experience is treasured and meant to be uninterrupted. As it always has been, chewing gum, passing notes and cheating are still the worst offenses of classroom culture. But they are joined today by a relative newcomer: using a cell phone. The reasons that cell phones have become “technology non-grata” run the gamut from class disruption to cheating, texting and coordinating fights. According to the National Association of School Resource Officers, 81 percent of K-12 schools do not allow use of cell phones in school. Sixteen states have gone so far as to pass laws against cell phone use in K-12 schools. In Boston, New York City, Washington, D.C., and across the country, K-12 schools have banned the use of cell phones during school hours.

The same culture applies to the classroom experience in higher education. On college campuses, professors have taken an especially hard line against the use of cell phones and laptops because of the disruptions caused by calling and texting and surfing the Internet. Most classrooms have signs posted prohibiting use of cell phones and many professors include similar language in the class syllabus. A National Education Association survey shows that 85 percent of professors on college campuses support banning cell phones in their classrooms.

“I don’t want students to have phones out during class,” said Emily Drill, an adjunct lecturer in neuroscience at the University of Pittsburgh and Allegheny College. “I make it a policy for phones to be turned off in the classroom.” Drill said that even with her own policy in place, typically one or two students per class still try to text or answer calls. “I tell them to put it away and that usually works.”

Drill’s simple request to “put it away” is one of the less extreme examples of how professors discourage cell phone use in class. One professor’s policy involves the use of a pop quiz every time a cell phone rings, and another professor counts it as an unexcused absence if a student leaves class to answer a call. Some professors confiscate phones, others add time to the end of class to make up for disruptions and some will deduct points from final grades. To see the battle in action, you can watch students’ phones get smashed and destroyed by professors on YouTube.
 
So it’s clear that the classroom is one of education’s sacred spaces, but what happens when events outside demand that emergency information has to penetrate the protective cocoon of the classroom?


Mass Notification Layers Fail to Penetrate


Unfortunately the most predominant methods of mass notification used on university campuses — cell phone/text messaging, e-mails and Web announcements — are minimally effective in the classroom. According to a survey conducted by the University of Louisville, nearly 90 percent of universities and colleges use cell phone calling/text messaging systems for emergency notification. About 98 percent use e-mail and 95 percent make announcements on the school website.

On average nationally, only 40 percent to 50 percent of students opt into a school’s calling program. In a classroom of 25, that equates to 10 to 12 students covered by the calling system. If 75 percent of them (an arbitrary number) have their phones turned off in class, then only about two to three students in the room would be able to receive a message pushed out through the school’s cell phone/text message emergency notification system. Given that the calling system cannot assign priority to or target the classroom, it may be 30 minutes or more before a message appears on one of those phones. Fewer students bring laptop computers to class but the same logic applies.

“Emergency notifications in the classroom setting must be made by more effective tools than e-mail, text messages or Web pages. Two-way communication systems, radio receivers, digital signage or VoIP phones provide the most rapid means for emergency notification,” said Dennis Sullivan, assistant environmental health and safety director and emergency manager at Louisville University.


You may use or reference this story with attribution and a link to
http://www.emergencymgmt.com/disaster/Mass-Notification-Layers-Fail-Reach-Classroom.html


Comments


Add Your Comment

You are solely responsible for the content of your comments. We reserve the right to remove comments that are considered profane, vulgar, obscene, factually inaccurate, off-topic, or considered a personal attack.



Latest Blog Posts RSS

August Vernon: Incident Management Blog Terrorism Response Operations for Public Safety (TROPS)
May 16 Terrorism Response Operations for Public Safety (TROPS)…
Emergency Management Blog - Rick Wimberly & Lorin Bristow Alerting and Warning Word Spreading Fast About CMAS/WEA
May 16 The new Wireless Emergency Alert System is generating public buzz, and national publicity.…
Adam Crowe - Disasters 2.0 Sink or Swim: What the Titanic Teaches Us About Social Media
May 16 Emergency managers must consider how to approach social media to avoid sinking like the Titanic…



Emergency Management Papers

Message Mapping: How to Communicate During the Six Stages of a Crisis

For more educational papers about best practices and trends in emergency management visit our full library