The Hochsprung Center at Russell Sage College [logo]

Jerome D. Steele, Ed.D., director of the Dawn Lafferty Hochsprung Center for the Promotion of Mental Health and School Safety at Russell Sage College issued the following statement in response to the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas:

On Tuesday afternoon, May 24th, I was about to introduce the moderator and panelists for the final segment of the Spring Webinar series sponsored by the Hochsprung Center at Russell Sage College and the New York State Council of School Superintendents. The topic for this webinar was Addressing the Social-Emotional Issues of our School Communities. A few minutes before we started, one of my colleagues, Dr. Janice White, mentioned that she had just heard of another tragic shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, where at that time it was thought that 14 children had died, but we know now that 19 children and two of their teachers perished.

Almost ten years ago, Russell Sage College lost one of its most promising doctoral candidates, Dawn Lafferty Hochsprung, the Principal of Sandy Hook Elementary. In the aftermath of that tragedy, the Hochsprung Center was created for the promotion of mental health and school safety. Since it’s inception in 2013, the Center has hosted four conferences and seven webinars devoted to mental health and school safety. We initiated the free webinar series calling upon the expertise of school leaders from across New York State as a way to reach to educators who were dealing with a number of issues related to the pandemic.

As the events unfolded in Uvalde, it was a shocking reminder that nothing has been done to stem the tide of gun violence in our country. Since Sandy Hook, there have 3500 mass shootings in the United States. Twenty-seven school shootings this year. On the floor of the Senate on Tuesday afternoon, Senator Chris Murphy, from Connecticut, pleaded with his colleagues to do something. What will be done? When will there be a tipping point to have the United State Senate do something? How many more children and teachers must die? Everyone is asking the same questions.

Over the next several days, we will be celebrating Memorial Day weekend to honor those who served our country and died protecting our freedom.  The Russell Sage College Doctoral Program in Educational Leadership along with the Hochsprung Center is planning a conference in the Fall of 2022 to remember and honor the courage of Dawn Lafferty Hochsprung, the teachers, and children of Sandy Hook elementary school. How many Memorial Days will be needed to remember the lives lost in school shootings? This must not become the new normal.

In the aftermath of Sandy Hook, Nicole Hockley a mother who lost her son that day, founded the Sandy Hook Promise Foundation.  According to the website the Foundation, “envisions a future where children are free from shootings and acts of violence in their schools, homes, and communities.”  Their mission is, to end school shootings and create a culture change that prevents violence and other harmful acts that hurt children. Through our proven, evidence-informed Know the Signs programs and sensible, bipartisan school and gun safety legislation, we teach young people and adults to recognize, intervene, and get help for individuals who may be socially isolated and/or at risk of hurting themselves or others.

I encourage everyone to explore the Sandy Hook Promise website at https://www.sandyhookpromise.org/ to understand their mission and vision for stopping gun violence and its impact on our children, families, and communities.

We must stand together as educators and as citizens to promote the mission and vision of Dawn Lafferty Hochsprung Center at Russell Sage College and Sandy Hook Promise.  The most recent events in Buffalo and Uvalde must never happen again.

Jerome D. Steele, Ed.D., Director of the Hochsprung Center at Russell Sage College

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