WASHINGTON 鈥 The video is clear; the actions are rapid. A school resource officer strides toward a student, issues a command, and in seconds, he鈥檚 grabbing her desk, flipping it over, then dragging the student toward the front of the room.
The and reactions were powerful. There was an outcry from those who felt the officer was completely out of line, and there were those who said the student failed to obey a police order.
Don Bridges, a Baltimore County police officer and聽First VP for the National Association of School Resource Officers (NASRO), has a different take on the footage from the South Carolina schoolroom.
Bridges, who serves as an SRO in Baltimore County鈥檚 Franklin High School, says when school districts agree to have police work inside schools, a memorandum of understanding should be drawn up:聽鈥淚t clearly defines what the roles of the SROs are,鈥 Bridges says.
He聽says that when schools stray from those roles, that’s聽when trouble begins.
Bridges says it鈥檚 hard to know precisely what went wrong in the case in South Carolina, but Bridges says NASRO makes one thing clear: 鈥淭he SROs have absolutely nothing at all to do with discipline within a school.鈥
Student conduct and discipline, Bridges says, should be left to teachers and administrators.
Bridges has been a school resource officer since 1998, and says officers who opt to work in schools should be selected and screened very carefully, and 鈥渘eed to have a genuine liking for kids.鈥
Mostly,聽SROs don’t聽deal with emergencies, says Bridges, but problems聽that do demand attention. That doesn鈥檛 mean police should use a heavy hand.
鈥淚f they鈥檙e not handled properly, then they can quickly become a 911 type of situation,鈥 says Bridges.
Knowing the students鈥 concerns and knowing students by name, Bridges says, are among the SRO鈥檚 most powerful tools for the job. Bridges says it boils down to establishing relationships with students based on caring, trust and respect.
鈥淭he kids within a schoolhouse, they respect an SRO 鈥 if the SRO is committed to them.鈥
