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ALICE, America鈥檚 Most Controversial Active-Shooter Training that Teaches Kids to Fight Back, Saved Dozens of Lives in Oxford HS Attack, CEO Claims

A memorial outside of Oxford High School on Dec. 1 (Getty Images)

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As gunshots rang out inside Michigan鈥檚 Oxford High School last week, terrified students scrambled for shelter, barricading classroom doors with desks and chairs should the gunman try to burst inside. Some wielded scissors and calculators as makeshift weapons in case they had to fight back. 

One student, 16-year-old star running back Tate Myre, as he charged toward the gunman in an attempt to stop the mayhem. He died while being rushed to the hospital in the back of a deputy鈥檚 squad car.

For many, the scene symbolized a harrowing reality: After years of routine drills, the school鈥檚 students 鈥 members of the 鈥渓ockdown generation鈥 鈥 seemed to know how they should act under fire. For the ALICE Training Institute, among the country鈥檚 most controversial school security groups, scenes from inside the school were validating. Oxford students underwent ALICE鈥檚 , a fact that Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard said likely saved lives.

The Oxford community 鈥渨ould have seen three to 10 X the number of deaths鈥 without the company鈥檚 guidance, JP Guilbault, CEO of , which owns ALICE, told 社区黑料. Such casualty claims would have made the Oxford shooting 鈥 where four students were killed and six students and one teacher injured 鈥 the worst mass school shooting in U.S. history. 

鈥淏ased on student accounts, it was clear to me the school went well into preparing their kids for something they hoped they would never see,鈥 said Guilbault, who leads the country鈥檚 largest for-profit provider of active-shooter drills. 鈥淏ut those kids were prepared.鈥 

Almost all schools in America conduct active shooter drills despite a growing concern in recent years that they’re ineffective and traumatize students who are forced to grapple with their mortality on a regular basis. Dubbed by one news outlet, ALICE has repeatedly found itself at the forefront of controversy. In a 2019 ALICE training incident, for example, law enforcement officers who led a mock school shooting with plastic airsoft pellets, leaving welts and bruises on the unsuspecting educators. The episode led school safety experts to denounce the drills. 

Now, the high-profile Nov. 30 shooting in Oxford, which resulted in the very rare circumstance of both the 15-year-old suspected gunman and his parents being charged, has reignited a tense debate about how to prepare students for the possibility that they could find themselves under attack. In a letter, Oxford Community Schools Superintendent Tim Throne said the district to review its safety practices. 

An “active shooter” is tackled as he attacks a classroom during ALICE (Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter and Evacuate) training at the Harry S. Truman High School in Levittown, Pennsylvania, on Nov. 3, 2015. (Jewel Samad / Getty Images)

ALICE 鈥 an acronym for Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter and Evacuate 鈥 employs a model that goes far beyond traditional lockdown drills that the company and its proponents say offers a toolbox of options as an attack unfolds and increases students鈥 odds of survival. Yet critics argue the institute鈥檚 training doesn鈥檛 just traumatize children, but could put them at greater risk of getting killed. 

Traditional lockdowns teach children to bolt classroom doors, turn off the lights, move as far away from windows and doors as possible, stay completely silent and wait for emergency responders to arrive with help. Along with locking doors, 鈥渕ulti-options鈥 approaches like ALICE teach students to barricade the doors with desks, chairs and other environmental objects and to self-evacuate if they feel it鈥檚 safe. As a last resort, ALICE teaches students to 鈥渃ounter鈥 鈥 or fight 鈥 the gunman. 

Teaching kids to fight off a gunman is by far ALICE鈥檚 most contentious lesson. But Guilbault, the CEO, said that traditional lockdowns teach students 鈥渢o just sit in place鈥 and conditions 鈥渢he natural freeze process鈥 when confronted with a deadly threat. By presenting multiple avenues of response, Guilbault said, ALICE strengthens students鈥 chances of coming out of such lethal encounters alive. The factors most critical to survival, he said, are 鈥渢ime and distance.鈥 

鈥淪hould a door get breached, your job is to figure out how to give yourself time and distance,鈥 including through distraction techniques like throwing books and other classroom supplies, he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 clear the kids were getting ready, if that door was breached, to throw objects and to give themselves the best chance of surviving.鈥 

People attend a vigil downtown on Dec. 3 to honor those killed and wounded during the recent shooting at Oxford High School in Oxford, Michigan. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

In one viral video, a classroom of students were shown engaging with someone through a barricaded door who identifies himself as a member of the sheriff鈥檚 office. Skeptical of the man who tells them 鈥渋t鈥檚 safe to come out,鈥 students flee the room through a window. Guilbault said the students made the right decision when they refused to open the door because they were unsure who stood on the other side. Yet he said he would have instructed them to remain silent rather than engage in a conversation with the man. The sheriff later said the man was not the gunman, but was most likely a plainclothes police officer. 

Though Guilbault declined to comment on reports that Myre, one of the shooting victims, had charged toward the gunman, he advised against the strategy.

鈥淔ighting is a last resort,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e teach individuals that are not first responders to move away from danger, not towards it.

Drills raise competing philosophies

School safety consultant Kenneth Trump, the president of Cleveland-Based National School Safety and Security Services, is among the institute鈥檚 most outspoken critics. K-12 students鈥 brains haven鈥檛 fully developed and many lack the capacity to fight off a gunman, Trump said. Meanwhile, students self-evacuating from the school could increase their odds of getting shot, he said, while inhibiting police officers鈥 ability to pursue the shooter. 

Students are being asked 鈥渢o make split-second decisions that trained law enforcement and military professionals still struggle with鈥 when confronting an armed gunman, said Trump, who endorses traditional lockdowns during active shootings. 

Research on the efficacy of active-shooter drills is limited, but in the peer-reviewed Journal of School Violence used simulations to test ALICE against traditional lockdown drills. Traditional lockdown drills ended when the shooter ran out of ammunition, researchers found, while participants using ALICE techniques were able to thwart the attacker. The study鈥檚 results, the authors wrote in an op-ed, 鈥渂rings into serious question if traditional lockdown should still be considered as the sole response to these types of events.鈥 The sophomore charged in the Oxford shooting had 18 rounds of ammunition still on him when he quickly surrendered to police. 

Trump challenged the study鈥檚 independence and rigor. One author works for ALICE and the others are certified ALICE instructors. Police officers made up a large share of simulation participants and children weren鈥檛 included. 

Study co-author Cheryl Lero Jonson, an associate criminal justice professor at Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio, denied that any conflicts of interest exist between her being a certified ALICE instructor and her research. 

ALICE relies on a train-the-trainer model to put its method in front of millions of kids across the country each year. Through a two-day course, educators and police learn the ins and outs of the approach before passing its lessons on to youth. Guilbault said that multiple Oxford officials are ALICE instructors and the district has been a customer for several years, but declined to comment on who went through the company鈥檚 certification process. 



“We don鈥檛 put smoke in a school to practice for fire or big fans in the school to practice for a tornado. Personally, what I think is happening, it鈥檚 rogue instructors.”

鈥擟heryl Lero Jonson, associate criminal justice professor and certified ALICE instructor


ALICE鈥檚 train-the-trainer model allows for a wide degree of variability, Guilbault said. Oftentimes, the drills are , who are accustomed to tactical training, and are conducted to mimic real-world shooting simulations 鈥 a tactic Guilbault said 鈥渋s common in law enforcement, but it鈥檚 not applicable for kids or teachers.鈥 used by ALICE trainers. Guilbault said that ALICE instructors must take students鈥 age into consideration.

The result, Trump argued, is a training model that resembles the 鈥渢elephone game鈥 that鈥檚 left some districts undergoing full-scale simulations that resemble real-world mass shootings.

鈥淚t leaves a lot of room for interpretation to the point where we鈥檝e seen some very extreme cases鈥 including incidents where administrators told kids to keep cans of soup under their desk to throw at any potential gunmen. 鈥淭hose variations have left people scratching their heads going, 鈥榃hat are you thinking?鈥欌 

Johnson said that ALICE 鈥渁damantly opposes鈥 full-scale active shooter simulations with weapons and fake blood because it 鈥渃auses undue trauma鈥 in children.  

鈥淲e don鈥檛 put smoke in a school to practice for fire or big fans in the school to practice for a tornado,鈥 she said while acknowledging that simulations have been central to multiple ALICE-related controversies. 鈥淧ersonally, what I think is happening, it鈥檚 rogue instructors.鈥 

“Students” barricade a door of a classroom to block an “active shooter” during ALICE (Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter and Evacuate) training at the Harry S. Truman High School in Levittown, Pennsylvania, on Nov. 3, 2015. (Jewel Samad / Getty Images)

Drills prompt psychological concerns

Some education leaders and school safety experts have challenged the premise of active shooter drills altogether, pointing to a growing concern that active-shooter drills traumatize the kids who are forced to endure them.

Last year, the American Federation of Teachers, the National Education Association and the Everytown for Gun Safety Support Fund to unannounced active-shooter drills that simulate gun violence. Also in 2020, Everytown researchers and found the timing of active shooter drills were correlated with an uptick in posts that signaled stress, anxiety and depression among students, parents and teachers.  

Jonson, the Xavier University researcher, has pushed back. In a report last year, she that students are no more fearful of ALICE training than tornado drills. Just 1 in 10 surveyed students reported feeling a negative psychological outcome from ALICE. The 2019 survey was conducted in a single unidentified school district in the Midwest, which used discussion-based instruction rather than simulations. 

Forensic psychologist Jillian Peterson, an associate criminal justice professor at Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota and co-founder of , said the national conversation about school shootings has focused too much attention on 鈥渢arget hardening鈥 and responding to shootings rather than heading off the tragedies from unfolding in the first place. Peterson promotes a greater emphasis on preventative strategies like improving mental health supports in schools, creating welcoming campus environments and establishing anonymous reporting tools where students can alert the authorities to their peers鈥 troubling behaviors. 

On two occasions just before the Oxford shooting, teachers sounded the alarm about the suspected gunman鈥檚 concerning behavior. On the morning of the shooting, the student and his parents to discuss his behaviors but he was ultimately allowed to return to class. Several hours later, police say, he walked out of a school bathroom and opened fire. The factors leading up to the shooting will likely be explored in the independent review of the school鈥檚 actions 



“What was that experience for this perpetrator when he went through this ALICE training a month ago?”

鈥擩illian Peterson, associate criminal justice professor and co-founder, The Violence Project

Active shooter drills in particular, Peterson said, fail to account for a reality that most school shooters are insiders. Her research has found that are carried out by current or former students. Along with concerns the drills could lead to heightened anxiety and increase the perception that statistically rare school shootings are commonplace, Peterson said that active shooter drills 鈥 including the one recently carried out in Oxford 鈥 could teach gunmen how officials will react under siege. 

鈥淚f it鈥檚 an insider going through all of that with everybody else, with all of that information, then that approach just stops making a lot of sense,鈥 Peterson said. 鈥淏ut that also opens up all of these new avenues where you can say, 鈥楬ey, it鈥檚 a kid in this school who is going to do this. How do we make sure, as a school, that none of these kids are going to want to do this?鈥欌 

Meanwhile, there鈥檚 a growing concern that school shootings in which one mass shooting has a tendency to spark additional violence in the immediate aftermath as vulnerable people considering violence seek fame after reading about shootings and identifying with the gunman. Following the Oxford shooting, schools nationwide were confronted with a wave of 鈥渃opycat鈥 threats. 

Frequent active shooter drills, Peterson worries, could plant a seed by placing so much attention on school shooting preparedness.  

鈥淲hen we鈥檙e running students through this over and over and over again, what is that doing in terms of increasing fascination, in terms of having students think through this again and again?鈥 she asked. 鈥淲hat was that experience for this perpetrator when he went through this ALICE training a month ago?鈥 


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