PREPaRE Workshop 1: Comprehensive School Safety Planning
Prevention Through Recovery
Join this important training on Wednesday, May 3 from 8 am to 4 pm in Boise, Idaho to learn about safety planning for your district or school.
Participants will learn how to establish and sustain comprehensive school safety efforts that attend to both physical and psychological safety. The workshop addresses critical components needed to develop, exercise, and evaluate safety and crisis teams and plans and conduct building vulnerability assessments. The model also integrates school personnel and community provider roles in providing school‐based crisis preparedness and response activities.
You can read more about the training in this one-page handout. WS1 3rd Edition Description.pdf
The PREPaRE curriculum has been developed by the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) as part of NASP's decade-long leadership in providing evidence-based resources and consultation related to school crisis prevention and response. PREPaRE training is ideal for schools committed to improving and strengthening their school safety and crisis management plans and emergency response.
This training is open to all school mental health professionals, administrators, teachers, security officers, other pupil services personnel, and any other personnel who need to understand how comprehensive school crisis team is organized and functions.
Registration includes the one-day training, all training materials, and lunch.

DATE
Wednesday, May 3, 2023TIME
08:00 AM - 04:00 PM mtEvent Format
In-PersonAudience
Educators & Career CounselorsCost
30RSVP
yesOrganizer
http://www.nasponline.org/prepare...social media, communication, reunification, students with special needs, culture, and memorials. After this workshop, participants will be better prepared to improve their school’s climate, student resilience, and crisis response capabilities of school personnel. With updated research and strategies, this training makes a clear connection between ongoing crisis prevention, mitigation, protection, and response.
– National Association of School Psychologists
Third Edition