Promoting tolerance on campus
Angelique Flores
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Edison High School students hosted a candlelight
vigil in the Edison Bowl on Wednesday as a means of promoting tolerance.
The vigil was a push toward a better understanding of getting along as
a way to avoid hate crimes and discrimination on high school campuses,
Vice Principal John Elliott said.
“It’s an overall general view that we need to be a little more
tolerant of one another,” he said.
The event was spearheaded by the Edison Cultural Diversity Group and
included speakers and live music by the students. Students dedicated the
vigil to all the victims of the violent school tragedies.
“After the shooting [at Santana High School], it really caught our
eyes because it was closer to our area,” said Edison student Annie Yea,
who is also the student representative for the district.
School officials around the Huntington Beach Union High School
District hope that events such as this as well as heightened security
will prevent any outbursts of violence at local schools.
“We ask everybody in the office to be out and about all the time,”
Elliott said.
Since the fall, each school has had a school resource officer.
Lock-down drills, such as the one at Marina High School on Tuesday, have
also been practiced.
“To us it’s sad that it’s gotten to the point, but I feel safer
because of what’s been going on,” Yea said.At the beginning of the school
year, several schools had a lock-down practice, district trustee Susan
Henry said.
At Fountain Valley High School, police conducted practice drills
during the summer.
Dances have also had heightened security. For years, purses have been
searched, and doors have been locked at a certain time on some campuses.
At the recent districtwide dance at Knott’s Berry Farm, students were
checked with a metal detector.
“A couple weeks after the shooting we were careful and alert of what
people said,” Yea said. “We need to continue doing that because you never
know when it could happen.”
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