No matter where we are located, there is
always risk for crisis situations. Whether it is a natural disaster that may
occur or a human-generated disaster, it is important for early childhood
education facilities to be properly trained and prepared in order to keep
themselves and the students safe. In this blog, I will discuss two potential scenarios
that can affect a childcare facility and what professionals should do to
prepare for a possible event and how they should respond if the event actually
did occur.
The first scenario I will discuss a
fire outbreak in a back storage room of a child care facility. It is the middle
of the afternoon, and all three classrooms are filled with a total of
twenty-five children and ten staff members. As an employee of the center and
caregiver to the young children, it is your job to get them to safety before
they are harmed. Another potential hazard of a fire is the possibility of smoke
inhalation. You want to make sure the children are out of the building and in
clear, clean air as soon as possible to avoid the dangers of this.
It is highly important for the
facility to have a plan beforehand, in case a fire does occur. Training should
be done with both the staff and the children. They should all know the layout
of the building and how and where they would exit during this type of disaster.
It would be helpful to have a map posted in each room, so that they are constantly
reminded. The director of the facility should also make sure that all fire
alarms and any sprinkler systems and extinguishers are always in working order.
A separate alarm should be in the plan, such as a cowbell or whistle, should be
used to warn everyone in the building of a fire in case the fire alarm does not
go off. Additionally, “all staff should be thoroughly trained in the
differences in the types of fires (electrical, oil, chemical, etc.) and the
various materials and equipment available to combat each type of fire,
including commonly available substances and materials (baking soda, sand, water
soaked blankets, etc.)” (Bureau of Plans: Pennsylvania Emergency Management
Agency, 2003, p. 13).
Aside from training all of the staff
and children, it is important to involve the families of the students so that
they are also aware of facility’s plan in case of this type of emergency. The teachers
can talk with the parents about how they can discuss fire safety with their own
children and possibly have them practice a fire drill at home. They should also
considering having the emergency safety plan posted in the parent information
area and a map of the building with directions of how to exit just in case a
parent is ever in the building when a disaster occurs to just to make them feel
more at ease knowing the childcare facility has a plan to keep their children
out of harm’s way.
During the fire disaster, there are
additional steps the staff needs to take in order to ensure the safety of the
children. They should remain calm and follow through with the plan that was
previously established in order to exit the building safely. They should be
sure to grab all emergency information and files for the children so that they
can contact their families and a first aid kit in case any gets injured while
exiting the building. It would be wise to have these things in a designated
spot at all times, so that when an emergency does happen, they are easy to grab
on the way out. “After occupants are safe, the fire department should be
notified without delay” ((Bureau of Plans: Pennsylvania Emergency Management
Agency, 2003, p. 13).
The second potential disaster that
can strike an early childcare facility is a human-generated disaster.
Unfortunately, this is something our country is beginning to know all too well,
and as we all saw with the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, it can happen
in places we would never even expect. Here is the scenario. You are in your
classroom in the childcare facility reading a story to your ten students and
another teacher comes into the room and tells you that some unauthorized is in
the building and a potential harm to the children. How would you react and keep
your students safe?
It is an unfortunate reality that
these disasters do happen spontaneously so there are not always warning signs.
However, there are a few measures the facility’s staff can take to be prepared.
There should always be someone near the entrance to the facility enforcing
security and making sure that only authorized individuals are entering. Many
childcare centers check identification cards and student files if they are not
familiar with the person entering the center. It may also be helpful to have a
signal to alert the rest of the facility in case someone does get past the
entrance and they are not supposed to, such as a whistle, intercom signal, or
separate alarm aside from those used for fire or other emergencies. Staff and
children should also be trained and have a plan of how they would respond if
this type of disaster ever does happen.
This can be a very scary kind of
disaster for the children, so it is important for teachers and families to work
together to teach the students about this. Parents can explain to the children
that this is a rare type of disaster, but they still need to be prepared and
know how to react. They should go over the facility’s safety plan with their
own children and also explain to them that their teachers are there to keep
them safe so they need to follow their directions during this type of
occurrence.
If someone is may be violent or
armed enters the facility, it is important for the teacher’s to try and remain
calm for the sake of the children. If not already done so, the rest of the
facility should be warned and the police need to be called immediately. If they
are not able to get the children out the building quickly through a back door
or such, teachers should lock their classroom door immediately and turn off the
lights. Next, they should have the children stay quiet, away from door and
windows, and hidden to where they cannot be seen from the outside. At no point
should any of the center’s staff try to confront or take down the intruder. “Don’t
endanger yourself or any of the other children by trying some sort of rescue” (Bureau
of Plans: Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency, 2003, p. 21). Staff should
not open the locked doors for anyone unless they know for a fact that it is a
police officer, but when authorities do arrive, staff and children should
follow their directions.
Sadly, many other types of disasters
aside from the two I described can affect a childcare facility at any time.
However, with proper training and preparation, teachers, children, and
families, can be ready and knowledgeable of how they should react in the cases
of any natural or human-generated disaster.
References:
Bureau of Plans: Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency. (2003)
Daycare Facilities Emergency
Planning Guide.
Retrieved from https://class.waldenu.edu/bbcswebdav/institution/USW1/201350_03/BS_BSCD/EDUC_1005/Week%202/Application/Week%202%20Assignment/embedded/day_care_facilities_planning_guide.pdf
Hi Sabrina
ReplyDeleteIC enjoyed the post. It was interesting to read the human disaster that can happen. Especially with so many now going on we at our center have been practicing more lock downs and better ways to take care of the children fro safety.
VICKI