[W]hile school districts across the nation have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on safety and safety technologies, there is very little data about the relative effectiveness of these measures. While concern for student safety is certainly warranted, sound public policy should be based upon evidence of the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of these technologies, as well as their congruity with basic constitutional principles.
Back to School: Technology, School Safety and the
Disappearing Fourth Amendment
Crystal Garcia, PhD. & Sheila Suess Kennedy, J.D.
- Cameras. Ninety percent of districts questioned reported the use of security cameras in their schools, with the most common being a closed-circuit TV system. Most districts with cameras fed signals to monitors in real time. Eighty-five percent used both interior and exterior cameras.
- Recording Systems. Safety administrators where asked if they had some form of recording capability; if they did, they were asked which type of system they used: VCRs, multiplexers, time-lapse recorders, event recorders, digital recorders and/or continuous monitoring.[8] Of the 87% that reported having recording systems, the majority used VCRs, multiplexers, time-lapse recorders and continuous monitoring.
- Weapons Detection Systems. These systems include various forms of metal detectors—wands, walk-through metal detectors, and x-ray baggage scanners. They were far less common than cameras and recorders, although 55% of the schools reported having them in some form. Hand-held wands were by far the most common, although nearly a quarter of the schools in the survey had the more expensive walk-through detectors.
- Duress Alarms. These are electronic devices that allow an individual to summon help. They may be wall-mounted, or carried by school personnel. Most commonly, they are placed in areas prone to problems: cafeterias, administration offices, teacher’s lounges, and sometimes classrooms. The use of these systems was far less common than cameras, recorders or weapon detectors.
- Entry Control Devices. These may be turnstiles, scanner cards, passwords/pincodes, or biometric identifiers. As a category, entry control devices were least common among responding schools, although school security administrators expressed considerable interest in biometric identifiers. Currently, the expense of such system is a barrier to their acquisition and use; should the cost decline and courts approve, their use will undoubtedly increase substantially.
The first prong of this test, which has been adopted by the courts in subsequent cases,[15] is particular important to the constitutional analysis of entry control devices, weapons detection systems, and recording devices, because all students are subject to the search. No suspicion is involved. And indeed, until 1995 challenges to the propriety of student searches revolved around the question whether reasonable, individualized suspicion justified the search, as well as the scope of the ensuing search itself. “Until 1995, the short answer to the question of whether schools could mandate all or a class of students to submit to blood or urine tests for drugs could be clearly answered ‘no.’”[16] Such testing was seen as a violation of students’ reasonable expectations of privacy.[17]
In its 2001-2002 Term, the Court extended the authority of school corporations yet again. In a 5-4 decision in Board of Education of Independent School District No. 92 of Pottawatomie County v. Earls, et al.,[22] the Court considered a school policy requiring all middle and high school students to consent to urinalysis testing for drugs in order to participate in any extra-curricular activity. Despite the absence of a demonstrated drug problem at the school, the Court found the suspicionless, random drug-testing program a “reasonable means” of furthering an important interest in deterring drug use among schoolchildren. Writing for the Court, Justice Thomas ruled that the “reasonableness inquiry cannot disregard the schools custodial and tutelary responsibility for children … In particular, a finding of individualized suspicion may not be necessary when a school conducts drug testing.”[23]
V. Other Legal Considerations
If school administrators are to make effective use of technology, they need to complete the following steps:
- Identify the major security concerns of the school, on a school-by-school basis. “One size fits all” solutions are rarely if ever cost-effective.
- Identify the locations in each school most vulnerable to security concerns.
- Identify the technologies, if any, which might have a measurable effect on safety.
- Consider the legal constraints, if any, governing use of that technology in that location.
- Develop proper support functions, to be performed by school personnel that would bolster the performance of the designated technology.
· Enhancing training about troubled youth offered to school safety officers, teachers and administrators;[41]
· Expanding the cadre of youth-led violence reduction programs;[42]
· Implementing mentoring programs and providing after-school activities;[43]
· Offering meaningful alternative programming for suspended or expelled youth; and
· Reinstating many of the extra-curricular activities recently removed from school budgets.
Table 1: Concern about School Violence & Changes in Security
Issues
|
% of School Safety Administrators Responding |
||
Minor or Somewhat Minor |
Average |
Somewhat Major Or Major |
|
Concern About School Violence | 12 | 22 | 66 |
Changes to School Security | 15 | 15 | 71 |
Impact of School Shooting Stories | 17 | 29 | 54 |
*due to rounding, percentage total may not =100.
Table 2: School District Expenditures for Safety Technologies
Expenditures |
# of School Districts |
% of Total |
$0 | 4 | 11 |
<$5,000 | 1 | 3 |
$5,001 – 10,000 | 3 | 8 |
$10,001 – 25,000 | 2 | 5 |
$25,001 – 50,000 | 2 | 5 |
$50,001 – 100,000 | 3 | 8 |
$100,001 – 500,000 | 8 | 21 |
$500,001 and Over | 15 | 40 |
*due to rounding, percentage total may not =100.
Table 3: Perceptions of Safety on Campus
Statements
|
% of School Safety Administrators Responding |
||
Strongly Disagree or Disagree |
Neutral | Agree or Strongly Agree |
|
Faculty/Staff Feel Safe at Our Schools | 7 | 27 | 66 |
Students Feel Safe at Our Schools | 12 | 34 | 54 |
Table 4: School District Use of Safety Technologies
Type of Technology (n=# of respondents answering question) |
% of School Districts with the Technology |
Video Cameras (n=40) Monitor Fed to Viewer in Real Time (n=40) Computer Based Camera Networks (n=40) Closed Circuit TV System (n=39) Cameras with Color Images (n=40) Cameras with Pantilt Zoom (n=40) |
90 78 35 82 58 60 |
Recording Systems (n=40) VCR (n=40) Multiplexers (n=40) Time Lapse Recorders (n=39) Event Recording (n=39) Digital Recorders (n=39) Continuous Monitoring (n=39) |
88 83 78 69 23 31 64 |
Weapons Detection Systems (n=40) Metal Detector Wands (n=39) Walk Through Metal Detectors (n=40) X-Ray Baggage Scanners (n=40) |
55 56 23 3 |
Duress Alarms (n=40) Strategically Placed Alarms (n=40) Alarms Worn by Personnel (n=40) |
40 38 5 |
Entry Control Devices (n=40) Turnstiles (n=40) Scanner Cards (n=40) Password/Pincode (n=40) Biometric Identifiers (n=40) |
18 0 10 10 0 |
Table 5: Perceived Support for Use of School Safety Technologies
Constituencies
(n=# of respondents answering questions) |
% of School Safety Administrators Responding |
||
Minor or Somewhat Minor |
Average | Somewhat Major Or Major |
|
Administration (n=40) | 10 | 29 | 61 |
Teachers (n=40) | 20 | 32 | 49 |
Students (n=39) | 41 | 26 | 33 |
Parents (n=40) | 18 | 28 | 55 |
Safety Personnel (n=38) | 5 | 8 | 87 |
Law Enforcement (n=39) | 15 | 13 | 72 |
Community Leaders (n=38) | 13 | 26 | 61 |
Gov. Officials (n=38) | 16 | 26 | 58 |
*due to rounding, percentage total may not =100.
Table 6: Perceived Effectiveness of School Safety Technologies
Question: How effective do you believe the safety technologies used in your district are at preventing and controlling crime? |
% of School Safety Administrators Responding |
||
Not Effective or Somewhat Effective |
Neutral
|
Effective or Very Effective |
|
Video Cameras (n=40) |
19 | 14 | 67 |
Recording Systems (n=33) | 21 | 15 | 64 |
Weapons Detection Systems (n=18) | 28 | 28 | 45 |
Duress Alarms (n=6) | 33 | 33 | 33 |
Entry Control Devices (n=14) | 36 | 43 | 21 |
Note: Only districts having these technologies in place were allowed to answer effectiveness questions.
*due to rounding, percentage total may not =100.
What can this research—legal and empirical—teach us about policies intended to ensure school safety?
Despite the Supreme Court’s famous dictum in to the effect that schoolchildren do not shed their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate, case law since suggests otherwise. The Court has steadily diminished the reach of schoolchildren’s rights, while increasing the power and authority of school officials. As Dorianne Beyer has noted, the cases “suggest that the delicate balance between students, rights and school safety procedures is strongly tilting toward the rights of school authorities to proactively isolate and reduce perceived causes of school violence.”