School Shootings in US Already at a Record

Many were not the mass killing events that schools typically drill for, the authors say. They were an extension of rising everyday gun violence.  

St Louis’ Central Visual and Performing Arts High School – the latest scene of school gun violence. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

By James Densley, David Riedman and Jillian Peterson 

The Conversation

As a Michigan teen pleaded guilty on Oct. 24 to killing four students in a December 2021 attack, America was learning of yet another school shooting. This time, it was a performance arts high school in St. Louis, where a former student opened fire, killing two and injuring at least seven others before dying in a shootout with police.

The fact that yet another school shooting took place within hours of a gunman in a separate case appearing in court underscores how often these events take place in the U.S. As criminologists who have built a comprehensive database to log all school shootings in the U.S., we know that deadly school gun violence in America in now a regular occurrence – with incidents only becoming more frequent and deadlier.

Our records show that seven more people died in mass shootings at U.S. schools between 2018 and 2022 – a total of 52 – than in the previous 18 years combined since the watershed 1999 Columbine High School massacre.

Since the February 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, moreover, more than 700 people have been shot at U.S. schools on football fields and in classrooms, hallways, cafeterias and parking lots.

Many of these shootings were not the mass killing events that schools typically drill for. Rather, they were an extension of rising everyday gun violence.

More Frequent & Deadlier

There have been shootings at U.S. schools almost every year since 1966, but in 2021 there were a record 250 shooting incidents – including any occurrence of a firearm being discharged, be it related to suicides, accidental shootings, gang-related violence or incidents at after-hours school events.

That’s double the annual number of shooting incidents recorded in the previous three years – in both 2018 and 2019, 119 shootings were logged, and there were 114 incidents in 2020.

With more than two months left, 2022 is already the worst year on record. As of Oct. 24, there have been 257 shootings on school campuses – passing the 250 total for all of 2021.

Many of these incidents have been simple disputes turned deadly because teenagers came to school angry and armed. At East High in Des Moines, Iowa, in March 2022, for example, six teens allegedly fired 42 shots in an incident that took place during school dismissal time. The hail of gunfire killed one boy and critically injured two female bystanders. The district attorney described the case as one of the most complex murder investigations their office has ever conducted, partly because six handguns were used.

At Miami Gardens High in Florida that same month, two teens are alleged to have sprayed more than 100 rounds with a rifle and handgun modified for fully automatic fire. They targeted a student standing in front of the school, but bullets penetrated the building, striking two students sitting inside.

A similar situation unfolded outside Roxborough High in Philadelphia in October. A lunchtime dispute among students allegedly turned into a targeted shooting after a football scrimmage. Five teenage shooters are believed to have fired 60 shots at five classmates leaving the game, killing a 15-year-old.

In each of these cases, multiple student shooters fired dozens of shots.

The tally for 2022 also includes incidents involving lone shooters.

In April, a sniper with 1,000 rounds of ammunition and six semiautomatic rifles fired from a fifth-floor window overlooking the Edmund Burke School in Washington, D.C. at dismissal. A student, parent, school security officer and bystander were wounded before the shooter died by suicide.

Threats, Hoaxes & False Alarms

The increase in shootings in and around school buildings has many parents, students and teachers on edge. An October 2022 Pew Research survey found that one-third of parents report being “very worried” or “extremely worried” about a shooting at their child’s school.

Aside from the near daily occurrences of actual school shootings, there are also the near misses and false alarms that only add to the heightened sense of threat.

In September, a potential attack was averted in Houston when police got a tip that a student planned to chain the cafeteria doors shut and shoot students who were trapped inside. The following day near Dallas, another tip sent police scrambling to stop a vehicle on the way to a high school homecoming football game. Two teens had a loaded semiautomatic rifle and planned to commit a mass shooting at the stadium, it is alleged.

There have also been thousands of false reports of shootings this year. Hoaxes, swatting calls, even a viral TikTok school shooting challenge have sent schools across the nation into lockdown. Dozens, possibly hundreds, of these threats are automated 911 calls from overseas, but police have no choice but to respond.

People are so much on edge that a popped balloon at one California school in September led to an active shooter response from police. The sound of a metal pipe banging in August caused thousands of people to flee an Arkansas high school football stadium for fear of being shot. A loud bang from a chair being thrown caused a code red lockdown and parents to rush to a Florida high school.

A Better Way?

The rising annual tally of school shootings has occurred despite enhanced school security in the two decades since the Columbine massacre. Metal detectors, clear backpacks, bulletproof chalkboards, lockdown apps, automatic door locks and cameras have not stopped the rise in school shootings. In fact, the May 2022 mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, provides a case study in systemic failure across the school safety enterprise.

Federal legislation passed in the wake of Uvalde will provide districts with money to hire additional school social workers, or pay for better communication mechanisms in school buildings to address the warning signs of violence missed in dozens of high-profile attacks.

It is aimed at better identifying and helping at-risk students before they turn to violence. However, another area that needs attention is students’ ready access to firearms.

Some school shooters, like the perpetrator in Uvalde, are young adults old enough to get their guns legally from gun stores, prompting questions over whether some states need to reconsider a minimum age for firearms sales.

Meanwhile, most school shooters get their guns from home, making safe storage of firearms a public health priority.

But many children get their guns from the streets. Preventing weapons from getting into the hands of potential school shooters will require police and policymakers to devote resources toward cracking down on straw purchasers – those who buy firearms for someone else – and getting stolen weapons, unserialized ghost guns and guns modified with auto-sears to make them fully automatic off the streets.

Such measures could be what it takes to stop the tragic normalization of school shootings.The Conversation

James Densley is professor of criminal justice, Metropolitan State University. 

David Riedman is a Ph.D. student in criminal justice and creator of the K-12 School Shooting Database, University of Central Florida.

Jillian Peterson is professor of criminal justice, Hamline University.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The views expressed are solely those of the authors and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

8 comments for “School Shootings in US Already at a Record

  1. Vera Gottlieb
    October 29, 2022 at 15:06

    Another good US example to be emulated???

  2. Lorna Hillman
    October 28, 2022 at 19:34

    I think it’s important to note that these mass shootings are committed by and large by young men; young white men. To not mention this in this conversation is ignoring a huge part of the picture. So what is this all about? Anybody care to shed some light on this?

  3. rosemerry
    October 27, 2022 at 16:08

    This is the country that professes to care about human rights, sovereignty of nations, freedom, and all the rest while all the time interfering in other countries-sanctioning, invading, destroying, bribing, and never receiving any punishment . PLEASE do not pretend “9/11″ is equivalent to the bloodbaths of Vietnam,Cambodia, Laos, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, to mention on a few of the more recent”humanitarian interventions” . How dare Russia be so strong and independent when we consider it an enemy? Why does it not just let us take over its resources for ourselves? We tried in the 1990s until that mean Putin took over and stopped our rort. How dare China rival us and have so much success in making agreements all over the world with countries in a way that helps it and helps its partners?(we pretend it, not the IMF, puts the partners in debt).
    We have to practice our cruelty and hatred at home so we can export it wherever our power allows it on earth.

  4. Michael L Falk
    October 27, 2022 at 11:46

    It’s not just school shootings, but the sad fact is that all shootings across the US have continued to skyrocket with a commensurate toll in unnecessary deaths. The US has become the most deadly country on the planet where no place is safe with shooting at malls, bars, highways, entertainment events, sporting events, homes and, of course, schools. Academics try to explained away this escalation that is now becoming all too common to the point of acceptance. But, the sad fact is that everyone is avoiding the “elephant in the room”. It’s not just “shootings”, it’s “guns”!!! The Second Amendment has been in existence for over 230 years, yet it’s perversion has only been of recent interpretation supported by gun manufactures, gun organizations, gun enthusiasts, gun lobbies and, not the least of enablers, compliant politicians. To allow this mass murder in a supposed “free society” is pure insanity.

    • Eddie S
      October 27, 2022 at 23:54

      I for-one agree with you “110%” Michael. While guns by themselves in the possession of sane, well-adjusted individuals won’t result in violence, it’s the small percentage of individuals who are mentally ill, criminals, or violence prone individuals who will seek them out (legally or otherwise) and too often commit violent acts with them, some disgustingly horrific. As long as there are SO many firearms floating around, it obviously greatly increases the probability of these individuals getting a weapon and subsequently committing one of these acts. I could go on for pages on the subject, but the stats in the following link tell the depressing story of the abundance of firearms in this country as well as anything: hxxps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Arms_Survey

  5. rgl
    October 27, 2022 at 09:47

    When you take all hope away for a better future, and coupled with the ease in which people can obtain firearms, is any of this a surprise?

  6. Marika Czaja
    October 27, 2022 at 07:41

    It surely is important to establish and maintain a school shooting database – only I would like to know why those shootings occur in the US when they do not seem to happen in other countries.

    • Rafael
      October 27, 2022 at 21:25

      Why the US? One answer is that it is, in the words of Martin King, “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today”. Its history of genocide and slavery also seems very relevant.

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