Giving back: An awaited opportunity to make a change
- Brandon Bain
- Nov 18, 2016
- 3 min read
Updated: Nov 6, 2024
On December 14, 2012, I came home from a long day at high school only to find my mother crying in front of the TV. It was my senior year. I didn’t need any other stressors in my life. I was in the process of sending college applications and writing essays.
I asked my mother what happened. “Que paso?” She told me that 26 people were shot at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut. “Twenty of them were just babies. Little kids,” said my mother as she sobbed and pointed at the TV.
I stood there motionless staring at the television. A million thoughts ran through my mind. How could this happen? Why did it happen? Who would take the lives of innocent children at an elementary school? What steps did the school take to protect the students? Was I even safe in my own school?
I found myself frustrated and angry. I wanted to do something, but what could I do? I was just a senior in high school.
<img decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-4840 alignright lazyload" src="https://safeandsoundschools.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/IMG_1414-e1479497572510-225x300.jpg" alt="img_1414" width="225" height="300" /> Four years later, I found myself a Boston University College of Communication student as a PRLab account executive for Safe and Sound Schools. Maybe it was destiny, it was my opportunity to finally do something about school safety.
Using my skills and knowledge of public relations, I worked with my PRLab team, Yunong Song and Xiangyi Zhao, to find creative ways to spread the word about school safety. When we heard about Safe and Sound’s #givingtuesday fundraising campaign, Change for School Safety, we knew that we had to get everyone at COM involved.
We first presented to the entire PRLab agency of 100 students. As we explained why we as an agency need to get involved, we heard the many stories of students recounting where they were on the day of the Sandy Hook tragedy. They told us how they felt unsafe returning to school after it happened and revealed their standing concern for their young siblings, nieces, and nephews. PRLab accepted to be a part of the #ChangeforSchoolSafety.
Eager to get a head start, every PRLab student dropped their spare change in our Change for School Safety jar –a jar that students have access to in our meeting room, so they (and their clients) can drop off change anytime.
We didn’t stop there. On November 7, we challenged the AdLab agency to be a part of the Change for School Safety. As we left the presentation, the entire AdLab class yelled at us. “You guys are going down!”
<img decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-4842 alignleft lazyload" src="https://safeandsoundschools.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/IMG_1411-1-e1479497537391-225x300.jpg" alt="img_1411" width="225" height="300" />It was a good feeling. It was also good to hear that one of the AdLab students, Emily Hartwell, was going to make her own jar. “I am really happy that PRLab challenged us to participate in Change for School Safety. I am also participating at home by making my own school safety jar for my house.”
As BU students, we want to know our campus and every other campus throughout the nation is safe. Every child in America deserves to learn in a safe environment. Every parent in America deserves to know that their child is safe at school. We need to rethink school safety. We can’t wait for someone else to make that change. You have to be the change you want to see in this world.
Our team is working hard to get Boston University students involved in the Change for School Safety by talking to people, putting up flyers around campus, and getting people to understand why school safety should not be taken for granted. I just hope that by talking to at least five students a day, we can get other students from other colleges and universities to participate. I hope it encourages them to tell five others and so on –family, friends, coworkers, professors, anyone. School safety should be on everyone’s mind. It needs to be a priority.
Will you take the challenge and be a part of the change to make schools safer for all students?
Maria, PRLab student at the Boston University College of Communication
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