How do you do emergency planning when the teacher is in a wheelchair? The teacher wondered. The students had a plan.
“Like teachers all over the country, Marissa Schimmoeller returned to her high school classroom the day after the mass school shooting in Parkland, Florida, last week with a heavy heart. She told TODAY Parents she knew the day would be a tough one for her ninth and tenth grade English students at Delphos Jefferson High School in Delphos, Ohio.
“Schimmoeller went to school that day prepared to tell her students exactly what they should do in the case of an active shooter on their own campus. It turned out her students had a plan of their own — and when Schimmoeller revealed one key detail of it in an emotional Facebook post, the story quickly went viral….
”This is 24-year-old Schimmoeller’s first year of teaching, and she has more considerations that others when it comes to active shooter drills in her classroom: Schimmoeller was born with cerebral palsy and she uses a wheelchair.
“Her students are familiar with the day-to-day implications of her condition, she told TODAY Parents. “I begin on the first day by talking about my disability,” she said. “I tell them that they may be asked to assist me in the classroom — by passing out papers or writing on the board for me — and I allow them to ask me any questions they want to.
“However, last Friday was the first time that I had to share my limitations in terms of protecting them.”
“When her student asked what they should do in case of an attack, Schimmoeller said she felt “a bolt of fear and sadness run through me. I definitely don’t have all the answers, but I want them to feel safe in my classroom….”
“On Facebook, Schimmoeller wrote that she told the students, “I want you to know that I care deeply about each and every one of you and that I will do everything I can to protect you. But — being in a wheelchair, I will not be able to protect you the way an able-bodied teacher will. And if there is a chance for you to escape, I want you to go. Do not worry about me. Your safety is my number one priority.”
“Her students had other plans. “Slowly, quietly, as the words I had said sunk in, another student raised their hand,” Schimmoeller wrote.
“She said, ‘Mrs. Schimmoeller, we already talked about it. If anything happens, we are going to carry you…
”When I was in front of those amazing kids as they told me they would carry me out of our building, if, God forbid, we were faced with a situation like the one in Florida, it occurred to me that every child, every one of my students, is so full of light and goodness.”
“I wanted to share that with those around me, because I spent so much of my day angry about the violence, and I knew that people needed reminding of the good in this world just as much as I did,” she said.”
Next time anyone complains about the rising generation, tell them they don’t know these kids. They are our hope for a better future.

all i know is when i used a cane & was on crutches, no matter where i went, it was the kids who opened doors & held doors for me – some adults did too, but many were so preoccupied they didn’t even notice me!
LikeLike
I’m dreading the Ohio legislature’s response to school shootings.
Ed reformers hold the vast majority of seats and they never, not once, put anything forward that actually improves an existing public school anywhere in the state.
Which is not surprising, really, since the ideological goal is to replace all the schools with a privatized system.
They won’t be able to keep public schools “safe” unless they start from a place where they value public schools, and they don’t value public schools. People who valued public schools could maybe make some headway, but people who don’t never will.
LikeLike
Top 10 Signs the U.S. Is the Most Corrupt Nation in the World https://www.truthdig.com/articles/top-ten-signs-u-s-corrupt-nation-world/
LikeLike
As I read this post, tears gathered in my eyes, and I also thought what would Trump say.
We already know that answer.
He would say, “I don’t like people in wheelchairs.”
Because he said the same thing about POWs.
LikeLike
Offering to carry a wheelchair user is a generous and loving gesture, but ultimately does not support independence for the person using the wheelchair. Better to help develop escape measures the person can use on his/her own.
LikeLike
It is a kind and generous offer. When one’s life is at risk, it’s best to accept the help that is offered and work on independence later.
LikeLike