Excuses won't bring a dead kid back to life
By James Kraemer
School buses are one of the
safest ways to transport kids to and from school, about 2,000 times
safer than the family car, according to the National School Transportation
Association (NSTA). Yet, injuries on school buses are up...way up...from
a decade or so ago.
Total pupil injuries on and around school buses have increased 94%,
from 6,700 in 1985 to 13,000 injuries reported in 1996, by the National
Safety Council. The pupil population riding our nation's school buses
"has not fluctuated significantly over the past 20 years" and the number
of actual accidents has remained largely unchanged in this decade of the
'nineties, according to a 1997 CNN report on "School Bus Injuries."
Kids unpredictable behaviors, poor or ineffective training on how to
behave inside and outside the buses along with a lack of effective
follow through from the adults involved, speeding, daring, unskilled
or distracted drivers and frustration all have their part in injuring
kids.
It costs money to train bus drivers how to effectively manage children.
School district cost cutting efforts sometimes includes reducing,
even eliminating bus driver student management training. Several
states have intervened in this dangerous management decision,
occurring in both the private and public sectors, with new regulations
now requiring transportation departments to provide effective
training. STS (Strategies Training Systems) and other student
management instruction are making their way into transportation
departments that refused to recognize the importance prior to the new
regulations.
Over 30 percent of the accidents involving school buses are a direct or
indirect result of bus driver distraction. The out-of control or over
protective parent denies this danger and often attempts to minimize the
danger a child (often their child) can create on the school bus when
refusing to follow the bus driver's directions and practice courtesy
toward other students and the driver. Everything from the bus driver is
too picky (or too strict) to my child has a right and the bus driver has
no right often spew out along with my poor repressed child routines. Kids
pick up on the discord between the adults involved and quickly learn to
manipulate parents against school staff ... and sometimes staff against
staff.
The wise adults involved avoid criticizing the bus driver, the school,
other kids or themselves for the child's decision to misbehave.
They know that doing so can inadvertently give the child permission
to escalate from perhaps a minor issue into a major one.
Informed adults also know the school bus is a controlled environment and
the bus driver is the captain of that bus. An untrained or poorly
trained bus driver is one that needs encouragement, effective
training and help with the kids if that bus is to be a safe bus.
Replacing the bus driver when the root problem is the misbehavior of
some the kids and adults involved sets kids up for dangerous routines
waiting to act out on the bus, in the school and in the home.
Another issue is the conduct of some motorists around school buses. School
is in session and already school bus drivers are reporting motorists
are speeding around stopped buses. 90 million motorists illegally pass
stopped school buses each year, according to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration. Some school districts are experimenting
with dash cameras and many districts are asking for help from law enforcement
to keep a watchful eye on the activities around school buses this year.
Regardless of the decision some drivers make to go around a stopped bus
with the red flashing lights activated please continue to do your part
to help keep kids safe.
Make no kid killing excuses for anything you do around or concerning the
school buses. Rather, the adults involved must work together, with mutual
respect and a commitment to follow through with approprite and effective
consequences for misbehavior, if they are to help insure kids have a
safe ride on the bus this school year.
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Copyright ©1998 James Kraemer. Click on this Copyright
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