There is a big difference between checking a box and being prepared.
I have seen schools spend money on cameras, door locks, security glass, panic buttons, policies, and training programs, but still not be truly prepared for an active shooter attack. That does not mean those things are bad. Cameras matter. Locks matter. Communication systems matter. Security glass matters. Physical security matters. But none of those things replace trained adults who know what to do when seconds matter.
During an active shooter attack, the most important safety tool inside the school is still the trained staff member.
A camera does not make a decision.
A lockdown button does not calm a classroom.
A policy binder does not move students away from danger.
A security glass window or film does not fight back.
A locked door does not mean much if no one knows how to secure the room, communicate the threat, make the next decision, or make sure the door latches shut.
That is why active shooter training for school staff is so important. It is also why bad training can be dangerous.
Good training builds confidence. Bad training creates fear.
Good training teaches options. Bad training teaches scripts.
Good training prepares adults. Bad training puts the emotional burden on children.
Good training is connected to the actual school building, the actual buses, and the actual roles people serve in during the school day. Bad training is generic. It looks the same no matter where it is taught, what the building looks like, or what role the staff member plays.
Schools do not need more fear. They need better preparation.
Good Training Teaches Options, Not Scripts
One of the biggest mistakes schools make is teaching staff that there is only one response to an active shooter.
Real attacks are not scripted. They are fast, violent, confusing, and unpredictable. A teacher on one side of the building may need to respond differently than a teacher on the other side. A classroom next to an exit may have an opportunity to evacuate. A classroom near the threat may need to lock down and barricade. A staff member outside at recess may need to move students away from the building. A coach in the gym may have completely different options than a teacher in a second-floor classroom.
That is why staff must be trained to think, and why staff should be trained based on their role. A teacher, bus driver, substitute, custodian, cafeteria worker, and front office employee may all face different decisions during the same attack. A blanket training for everyone is not enough, yet that is what most schools across America still do. This is one of the reasons we continue to see failures during attacks.
At ONE Training, we teach Run, Hide, Barricade, Fight.
That does not mean everyone does the same thing at the same time. It does not mean everyone runs. It does not mean everyone hides. It does not mean everyone fights.
It means staff understand their options.
If you can safely get away from the threat, run.
If you cannot safely evacuate, hide.
If you are hiding, barricade.
If the attacker gets into your space and there is no other option, fight to survive. Many schools are afraid to teach this because we teach children not to fight. But this is not a playground argument. This is life and death. If someone is trying to kill innocent people, staff need to understand they are not helpless. They have the right to fight for their lives and the lives of the children in their care.
This matters because people freeze when they believe they only have one option and that option fails. If a staff member has only been taught “lockdown,” what happens when the attacker is between them and their classroom? What happens if the fire alarm is pulled? What happens if they are outside? What happens if they are in the cafeteria, gym, hallway, or parking lot?
Training must prepare staff for reality, not just policy.
Why Barricading Matters
The word “barricade” is important.
A locked door is good. A locked and barricaded door is better.
In an active shooter attack, time saves lives. Every second an attacker is delayed gives students and staff more time to escape, hide, communicate, or survive until law enforcement arrives.
Barricading does not need to be complicated. Staff should be trained to use what is already in the room. Desks, tables, bookshelves, cords, belts, wedges, filing cabinets, and classroom furniture can all become tools to delay entry.
The goal is not to create a perfect fortress. The goal is to make that room a harder target.
Attackers are often looking for speed, access, and opportunity. If a door is locked, blocked, and difficult to breach, the attacker may move on. That delay can save lives.
This is why the idea of “lock, don’t block” does not apply during an active shooter attack. In a normal fire-code or daily-use setting, keeping exits clear matters. But when someone is actively trying to kill innocent people or children inside a room, staff must be able to delay or deny entry when escape is not safe.
The problem is that “lock, don’t block” is often pushed as if a lock alone is always the answer. In my opinion, that mindset benefits lock manufacturers more than it benefits the people trapped inside the room. It turns a life-safety decision into a product-driven message. A good lock matters, but during an active shooter attack, a locked and barricaded door gives people a better chance to survive than a locked door by itself.
But staff will not automatically know how to barricade under stress unless they have been trained. They need to walk through it. They need to look at their own rooms. They need to ask practical questions:
What can I move quickly?
What furniture is heavy enough to help?
Does my door open inward or outward?
Can I secure the handle?
Can students help without creating chaos?
Where should students go in the room?
What do I do if the fire alarm activates?
What do I do if I hear shots but do not know where they are coming from? Good training answers those questions before the emergency happens.
Active Shooter Training Should Not Be Fear-Based
Some people think active shooter training has to be terrifying to be effective.
That is wrong.
A fire drill does not require setting the school on fire. A tornado drill does not require ripping the roof off the building. An active shooter drill does not require fake blood, screaming, surprise attacks, simulated gunfire, or someone dressed as an attacker running through the halls.
That kind of training may feel realistic to the people putting it on, but it can create fear without creating real preparedness.
The goal is not to scare teachers.
The goal is not to traumatize students.
The goal is not to make staff feel helpless.
The goal is to build confidence.
There is a place for more advanced scenario-based training for adults when it is controlled, professional, and appropriate. But there is no place for reckless, shock-based training that leaves people more afraid than prepared.
Good active shooter training should leave staff saying, “I know what to do.” Bad training leaves them saying, “I hope this never happens because I have no idea what I would do.”
Staff Training and Student Drills Are Not the Same Thing
Staff training and student drills should never be treated the same.
Adults need more detail. They need to understand how attacks unfold, how to make decisions, how to move students, how to barricade, how to communicate, and how to respond when the plan changes.
Students need age-appropriate safety instruction.
Younger students do not need graphic details. They do not need to be told every horrific thing that has happened in past attacks. They need simple, calm direction. They need to know that their teachers and school staff have a plan. They need to understand that their job is to listen, follow directions, and stay with the adult responsible for them.
Middle school students can handle more information than younger students, but they still need structure, reassurance, and limits. This should be treated as a lockdown drill, not an active shooter drill. They may ask harder questions. They may have fears. They may talk about things they have seen online. Schools need to be ready to answer those questions without creating more fear.
High school students can handle more detail, but they still should not be trained as if they are adult staff members responsible for securing the school. They need to understand response options, reporting concerns, and following trained adults during an emergency. We also have to remember that in many school attacks, the attacker is a current or former student. If you teach students every tactic staff will use to defend themselves, an attacker can adjust their plan. Student training must prepare students without giving away the full adult response plan.
Age-appropriate training matters.
A first grader, a seventh grader, and a senior in high school should not receive the same instruction.
Student training has to be age-appropriate, controlled, and empowering. The goal is not to scare students. The goal is to give them the right amount of information for their age and maturity level so they know how to listen, respond, and follow the trained adults responsible for protecting them. My friend Jake Edwards in Prince William County, Virginia, does student training and preparation the right way. His approach is age-appropriate, practical, and empowering. He gives students enough information to understand what to do without placing the full weight of school security on their shoulders.
Active Shooter Training Should Be Connected to a School Security Assessment
Training should never happen in a vacuum.
A school’s active shooter response plan should be connected to the actual building, the actual staff, the actual vulnerabilities, and the actual procedures.
That is where a school security assessment matters.
A proper school security assessment looks at the building and asks hard questions:
Can the main entrance be breached?
Does the glass delay entry, or does it fail quickly?
Does the glass meet the ASTM F3561 standard at critical entry points?
Do classroom doors lock properly?
Can staff lock classroom doors from the inside?
Can staff hear or see emergency notifications?
Can office staff communicate quickly?
Are there blind spots?
Are exterior doors being propped open?
Are classroom doors being propped open?
Are fire doors and smoke doors pre-locked when appropriate?
Can substitutes access emergency procedures?
Do staff know what to do during arrival and dismissal?
What happens during lunch?
What happens during recess?
What happens during after-school activities?
What happens if the fire alarm activates during an attack?
If training does not account for those realities, it becomes generic.
Every school building is different. A rural elementary school has different challenges than a large suburban high school. A private school has different access points than a public school campus. A school with multiple detached buildings has different evacuation challenges than a single-building campus. A school with a glass-heavy entrance has different vulnerabilities than one with a hardened vestibule.
Training must consider the building.
Assessment without training becomes a report sitting on a shelf and another checked box.
Training without assessment becomes a presentation disconnected from reality.
Schools need both.
Common Mistakes Schools Make with Active Shooter Training
After working with schools across the country and studying attacks after they happen, the same mistakes show up repeatedly.
Mistake 1: Training only teachers
Teachers are critical, but they are not the only adults responsible for safety. Every staff member needs to be included.
Mistake 2: Leaving out substitutes and bus drivers
This is one of the biggest gaps in school safety. Substitutes are often alone with students. Bus drivers often see students before anyone else. Both need training.
Mistake 3: Teaching lockdown as the only option
Lockdown can save lives, but it is not the only response. Staff need options.
Mistake 4: Using fear-based drills
Fear does not equal preparation. Trauma is not the goal. Trauma can cause people to shut down, forget what they learned, and lose confidence when they need it most.
Mistake 5: Ignoring the building layout
In-person training must be tied to the actual school building, not just a generic slideshow.
Mistake 6: Failing to test understanding
Attendance is not the same as comprehension. Staff need to understand their options well enough to apply them.
Mistake 7: Training once and moving on
Active shooter training should be refreshed. Staff change. Buildings change. Procedures change. Training needs to stay current. All staff should be trained, documented, and recertified every year.
Mistake 8: Not documenting who was trained
Schools should know exactly who completed training and when. If there is no documentation, the district may not be able to prove staff were properly trained.
Mistake 9: Ignoring communication
A plan is only as good as the school’s ability to communicate it during the emergency.
Mistake 10: Assuming “it won’t happen here”
Every community wants to believe that. After an attack, almost every community says the same thing: “We never thought it would happen here.”
That assumption keeps schools one step behind.
What Good Active Shooter Training Should Include
Good active shooter training for school staff should include:
- Run, Hide, Barricade, Fight
- Decision-making under stress
- Lockdown procedures
- Barricading techniques
- Evacuation options
- Communication procedures
- Reporting threats
- Recognizing warning signs
- Role-specific training for teachers, substitutes, bus drivers, office staff, custodians, and administrators
- Age-appropriate student drill guidance
- Connection to the school’s physical layout
- Connection to the school security assessment
- Documentation of who completed the training
- Regular refreshers and policy review
Most importantly, it should be taught by people who understand schools, active shooter attacks, law enforcement response, physical security, and the emotional weight of training people responsible for children.
What Active Shooter Training Should Not Include
Active shooter training should not include:
- Fake blood
- Surprise simulations with students
- Unannounced attacker scenarios
- Graphic content for children
- Fear-based instruction
- One-size-fits-all scripts
- Training that ignores substitutes, bus drivers, or support staff
- Training that is disconnected from the building
- Product sales disguised as training
- Instructors with no real experience in school security
- A message that makes people feel helpless
The right training should be serious, but not reckless. Direct, but not traumatizing. Realistic, but not theatrical.
Why Run, Hide, Barricade, Fight Works
Run, Hide, Barricade, Fight works because it gives people options.
In a crisis, options matter.
If staff believe they can only lock down, they may miss a safe chance to evacuate. If they believe they must always run, they may move students into greater danger. If they have never practiced barricading, they may lose valuable time. If they are never told they have the right to fight when trapped, they may believe they are powerless.
The point is not to create fear.
The point is to remove helplessness.
Run, Hide, Barricade, Fight teaches staff that they are not stuck with one answer. They can assess the threat, look at their environment, and make the best decision possible with the information they have.
That is what real preparation looks like.
Active Shooter Training Should Create a Culture of Safety
The best school safety programs are not built on one annual training day. They are built into the culture. We had to build the right culture inside our own business, and it is something we live every day. Schools are no different.
A culture of safety means staff ask questions before something happens.
Can this door lock?
Can this glass stop, or delay forced entry?
Can I hear the lockdown notification from my classroom?
Do I know where to move students if we evacuate?
Do I know how to barricade this room?
Do substitutes know the plan?
Do bus drivers know who to call?
Do parents know where to reunify after an emergency?
Do law enforcement officers know the building?
Do staff know how to report concerning behavior?
What if I hear a gunshot?
What if I think someone has a gun?
These are not fear-based questions. These are responsible questions.
A school that takes safety seriously does not wait until after a tragedy to find the gaps. It looks for them now. It fixes what can be fixed. It trains the adults. It strengthens the building. It reviews policies. It communicates clearly. It stays one step ahead.
Questions School Leaders Should Ask Before Hiring an Active Shooter Training Company
Before a school hires an active shooter training provider, leaders should ask:
What is your training based on?
Do you specialize in K-12 school security?
Do you understand school buildings, student supervision, and staff roles?
Do you train all staff, including substitutes and bus drivers?
Do you avoid fear-based or trauma-based drills?
Do you teach Run, Hide, Barricade, Fight?
Do you connect training to our actual building layout?
Do you help us identify policy and procedure gaps?
Can you document who completed training?
Do you have subject matter experts in active shooter response, education, physical security, and school safety on your team?
Do you understand physical security, assessments, and emergency response?
If a trainer cannot answer those questions clearly, that should concern you.
School safety is too important to trust to someone who is guessing.
The Goal Is Confidence, Not Fear
The purpose of active shooter training is not to make teachers scared to come to work. It is not to make students afraid to go to school. It is not to create panic in parents.
The purpose is to prepare the adults responsible for protecting children.
When training is done right, staff become more confident. They understand their options. They know how to lead. They know how to move students away from danger when possible. They know how to secure and barricade a room when escape is not safe. They know how to communicate. They know what to do when the situation changes.
And if the attacker gets into their space and there is no other option, they know they are not helpless.
That kind of training saves lives.
Schools do not need fear.
They need preparation.
They need adults who are trained.
They need assessments that identify real vulnerabilities.
They need physical security that delays entry.
They need communication systems that work.
They need policies that make sense.
They need a culture of safety.
And they need to stop assuming that a checklist is the same thing as being prepared.
Frequently Asked Questions About Active Shooter Training for School Staff
Active shooter training for school staff teaches adults how to recognize threats, communicate during an emergency, evacuate when safe, hide, when necessary, barricade rooms, and fight only when there is no other option. The goal is to prepare staff to make life-saving decisions under pressure.
Yes. Every adult in the building should be trained, including teachers, administrators, office staff, custodians, cafeteria workers, nurses, counselors, coaches, substitutes, bus drivers, and facilities staff. During an emergency, any staff member may become the first person who must act.
Run, Hide, Barricade, Fight is a response model that gives school staff options during an active shooter attack. Staff are trained to run if they can safely escape, hide if escape is not safe, barricade to delay entry, and fight only if the attacker gets into their space and there is no other option.
Barricading is important because it can delay an attacker and make a classroom or office harder to enter. That delay buys time for students and staff to escape, hide, communicate, and survive until law enforcement arrives.
No. Students may participate in age-appropriate lockdown drills, but they should not be exposed to graphic, fear-based, or surprise active shooter simulations. Students should receive calm, developmentally appropriate instruction based on their age and role. Lockdown drills should be announced as drills and kept short, controlled, and focused on safety.
School staff should receive active shooter training regularly, with annual training at minimum and refresher discussions throughout the year. Training should also be updated when staff, building layouts, policies, or security systems change.
Yes. The best active shooter training is connected to the school’s actual layout, entrances, glass, doors, communication systems, emergency procedures, and vulnerabilities. A school security assessment helps identify the gaps that training must address.
Schools should avoid surprise simulations, fake blood, simulated gunfire, graphic student scenarios, and fear-based drills. Training should be serious and realistic for adults, but it should not traumatize students or staff. Make safety the number one priority.
About Armoured One and ONE Training
Armoured One and ONE Training help schools stay one step ahead of active shooter attacks through school security assessments, tested physical security solutions, and practical active shooter training for staff.
Our training is built around real-world experience, school-specific vulnerabilities, and the belief that preparation should create confidence, not fear.
If your school or district is reviewing active shooter training, school safety procedures, security glass, security window film, or a full school security assessment, contact Armoured One to start the conversation.
The goal is simple.
Protect the children.
Prepare the adults.
Stay one step ahead.
End the story of active shooter.
Now Is the Time to Train Your Staff
Active shooter and active assailant training should not wait until after something happens.
Now is the time to contact ONE Training and book life-saving active assailant training for your school. The goal is not to scare your staff or students. The goal is to prepare the adults in your building and on your buses to make clear, confident, life-saving decisions during the worst moments imaginable.
ONE Training helps schools build practical, threat-informed training around Run, Hide, Barricade, Fight, staff decision-making, age-appropriate student drills, and real school vulnerabilities. This training is designed for the people who carry the responsibility every day: teachers, administrators, office staff, substitutes, bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers, coaches, and support staff.
If your school has not trained recently, if your staff only knows one response, or if your drills are creating fear instead of confidence, now is the time to act. If you have only checked the box or relied on free training that does not meet this standard, now is the time to raise the bar.
Contact ONE Training today to schedule life-saving active assailant training for your school.
Protect students.
Prepare staff.
Stay one step ahead.
End the story of active shooter.