Reading the New York Times article about Adam Lanza, the alleged Sandy-Hook killer, I’m in pain at how cut off from the humanity this boy was. Possible Asperger’s syndrome, no picture in a high-school year book, child of a dissolving marriage, living in a suburban box of a home. One quote by a former high-school classmate cut home: “I think that maybe he wasn’t given the right kind of attention or help. I think he went so unnoticed that people didn’t even stop to realize that maybe there’s actually something else going on here — that maybe he needs to be talking or getting some kind of mental help. In high school, no one really takes the time to look and think, ‘Why is he acting this way?’ ”
In the wake of these shootings, my immediate wish after this horror is for America to focus on reaching out to the abandoned people of the country.
I’m completely in favor of gun control, would gladly pay for better mental health care and wouldn’t mind less media violence. But, for me, the crying need is for connection. I think the most important thing in common among the countries who DON’T suffer these tragedies is community. Switzerland and Israel have guns; Germany has mental health care, Japan not so much: but all these places have intact, face-to-face societies where many people DO take the time to look and think. More about why this is so important in a second.
America can be such a lonely place — for men, particularly. I found this out when I got testicular cancer. There were more than 1,000 support groups for the female equivalent cancer (breast cancer) but not a single one for men. This observation isn’t meant to stir up gender strife; it’s just to point out that, for whatever reasons, men here don’t do a great job of helping each other in times of trouble.
Even the thinnest strands of human connection can lessen acts of violence. Those of you know about the famous Milgram Shock Experiments (Google it, if you don’t – but beware that films are disturbing.) probably are aware that authorities were able to convince about half of the population to deliver potentially lethal doses of electricity to strangers. What doesn’t get as widely broadcast is that any form of contact between perpetrator and victim radically reduced the level harm. That is to say, if the perpetrator knew the victim’s name, he or she didn’t “kill” as much. If the perpetrator touched the victim’s hand, he or she didn’t “kill” as much.
How can we — that is, Americans — better get to know and care for each other? Christian scolds like Mike Huckabee are offensive but they are probably if inadvertently right that regular attendance at a religious institution would help.
But you where and how it can happen even better?
In schools. Especially public schools.
Public schools are where kids first meet the world. If the world is kind enough to meet them right back, it can make all the difference. But is there a more lonely place in the universe than a lonely school?
I can’t tell you the number of outliers I’ve talked to over 25 years of teaching. But I can tell you that I have tried to take the time to talk with them regularly, introduce them to like-minded students, create safe, rewarding environments for them, and nudge them toward better habits. The letters and calls they send back, years later, makes me think that it might have done some good. Please understand, I’m not making any kind of arrogant boast about being able to have help Mr. Lanza and his victims. I just think that schools are institutions of social connection and that, along with so many other institutions in the USA, they can help.
I can also tell you that it’s EXACTLY this kind of human contact that the so-called school reform movement is trying to eliminate. Every time, some pompous politician declares that schools should be run like businesses, the fat that he’s talking about cutting is the “chewing the fat,” that makes schools warm places. Every extra standardized test and time-sucking set of “professional development” sessions and “implementation” periods slices the potential for teacher-student contact, too. And every one of those bell-shaped curves we fit over out students puts them in competition, not connection, with each other.
The word I’ve been using over and again here is “connection.” Now that I’m finishing, I realize that connection was a polite cover-up. The word I really mean — why was I so embarrassed to use it? — is love. What if Adam Lanza had felt loved? I think that would have made a big difference. Love comes primarily from family — but that doesn’t mean that the rest of us can’t throw more into the pot. I’m a teacher because it seems to me to be a way to create more love in the world. Schools, in my opinion, should nurture love.
That, yesterday, a school in America became a place of death leaves me in agony. But now that this unforgivably long monologue is over – I’m so sorry, guys — my response will be to get back in there and love more.

Lots of cliques in school, how does a child that doesn’t have social skills fit in? He doesn’t. Parents that don’t care, broken homes where parents are only interested in how they can fulfill their own needs and not the child’s. God taken out of the equation, teenagers getting pregnant and then society saying it is okay to murder the baby. Do you wonder why we have unrest today? It is more then guns, folks.
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One of the best things a teacher can do tomorrow is make an effort to continue building class community through morning meetings. Students want a predictive day and a feeling of connection. Not all students need it, but for those who do, it can have long term effects.
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Thanks, Diane. It is ridiculous, but in the current climate just standing up for connection is a big deal. However will we asses it?
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Funds & services for people needing mental health services & access to facilities have been steadily cut since the 1980’s . Families are on their own in caring for family members who need these services which are expensive. We are witnessing the “trickle down” impact of the loss of these services throughout our country.
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It is not right that Autism is now being targeted, parents will be up in arms about this, b/c the focus will be on their children. How awful that the ignorant news media just continues with their biased opinions.
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I think the concept of connection is spot on. I went to a conference this summer on mindfulness in the classroom. One of the speakers mentioned how children in particular feel invisible in a school. She suggested when we take attendance we say to each child, I see you and the child responds I am here. This validates a connection, something that is sorely lacking. I tried it this year with my class with excellent results. My students perk up when I say I see you and they love saying I am here. They have a purpose
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That’s great Anne. I had students check-in at the beginning of class. We bounced a ball around the circle a a talking stick and everyone said something about themselves. They felt seen and heard and I got insight into the “emotional temperature” of the room so that I could adapt. The tougher kids made fun at first but got into it later and reminded me when I tried to skip it.
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I can’t help but worry that the mind-numbing school culture of drill-and -test is setting up more and more kids to hate school. If some of them have untreated mental illness and access to guns – there we are. I hear kids all the time say “teachers only care about test scores.” Add in all the other teacher bashing and we become the face of a world a lonely uncared for kid resents. How horribly ironic, when most of us got into this because we do care.
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Please unsubscribe.
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Just another Redundant post. Teachers, realize this woman is not going to help us . Try to unsubscribe to her posts. You will find it is impossible.
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Can’t do it, Diane. Have tried multiple times.
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Although I agree with your post, you’re prolific and redundant emails leave me no choice but to I insist I be taken off your list. I am unable to do this I have marked emails as spam, try through word press to eliminate sure emails to no avail.
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This poster seems to me to get to the root of the problem, the lack of human connection, and the value of teachers in helping to provide it, but I do not agree that it can only take place in “public” schools. The crucial factor seems to me to be school size. Thus charter schools have a place, in my view. Schools should not be, in my view, larger than 220 kids. If a school is larger than a principal can know the names instantly of every student on sight, it is too big. But I agree that human connection, love, respect, attention can go a long way toward saving a kid. And Adam Lanza didn’t have it, and presumably sunk into the isolation of computer games for his day’s activity. If pro public school people would stop demonizing charter and private school people, that might possibly be a step toward human connection among adults, that would work to the good of the society as a whole.
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