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U.S. Parents' Fears for Child's Safety at School Unchanged
Education

U.S. Parents' Fears for Child's Safety at School Unchanged

by Zac Auter
Chart: data points are described in article

Story Highlights

  • 28% of U.S. parents are concerned for their children's safety at school
  • Mothers, minority and lower-income parents most likely to express concern
  • 13% of parents say their children have expressed fear about school safety

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- U.S. parents' concern for their children's physical safety at school has held steady this year at 28%. Parents' fears most recently edged up to 33% in 2012 and 2013 after the mass shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, in December 2012. Since then, the percentage of parents who fear for their children's safety has returned to the levels seen from 2009 to mid-2012.

U.S. Parents' Concerns for Their Children's Safety at School

Â鶹´«Ã½AV's 18-year trend documents spikes in parents' concern about school safety after major incidents of gun violence at schools, including the April 1999 (55%) and the March 2001 (45%), and an uptick after the December 2012 (33%).

The combined data since 2012 demonstrate that parents' worry varies among key subgroups. Mothers (33%) are more likely than fathers (25%), nonwhite parents (40%) are more likely than white parents (23%), and lower-income parents (41%) are nearly twice as likely as high-income parents (21%) to be concerned.

Parents' Concern for Their Children's Safety at School
  Fear for child's safety at school Child has expressed worry about safety at school
  % %
U.S. parents overall 28 13
Men 25 8
Women 33 13
Whites 23 9
Nonwhites 40 14
Income less than $30,000 41 19
Income $30,000 to $74,999 30 7
Income $75,000 or more 21 8
Parent of child in public school 30 11
Parent of child in private school 28 6
Parent of elementary school student (K-5th grade) 30 8
Parent of middle school student (6th-8th grade) 34 13
Parent of high school student (9th-12th grade) 26 11
Combined data from 2012-2016
Â鶹´«Ã½AV, Aug. 3-7, 2016

Despite the racial and income differences, concern among parents whose children attend public versus private schools does not differ significantly. However, parents of elementary and middle school students are slightly more likely than parents of high school students to be concerned about their children's safety at school.

Roughly One in Eight Students Express Fear for Their Own Safety

Currently, 13% of parents say their children have expressed fear about their safety at school. This is the highest level of fear recorded since 2001, when said their child indicated concern shortly after the Santana High School shooting. However, the current figure is largely consistent with the 8% to 12% range seen since 2012.

Trend: U.S. Parents Who Say Child Expressed Concerns About Safety at School

Parents' reports since 2012 that their children have expressed fear are higher among mothers than fathers, nonwhites than whites, and low-income than middle- and high-income parents. These patterns match those seen among parents' own concerns for their children's safety. Additionally, 11% of parents with children in public schools say their children have expressed fear about their safety in school, nearly double the rate among parents of children in private schools (6%).

Implications

The spikes in parents' fear for their children's safety in the wake of high-profile school shootings have receded in recent years. After the 1999 Columbine shooting that left 12 students dead, a majority of U.S. parents admitted concern for their children's safety at school. However, after 20 children were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticut in 2012, one-third of U.S. parents expressed fear for their children's physical safety at school.

According to the FBI, there have been as many as 50 mass murders or attempted mass murders in U.S. schools since the Columbine shooting. Parents' muted response to high-visibility school shootings in recent years could reflect an increasing desensitization to school violence.

Historical data are available in .

Survey Methods

Results for this Â鶹´«Ã½AV poll are based on telephone interviews conducted Aug. 3-7, 2016, with a random sample of 254 parents of children in grades kindergarten through 12, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia. For results based on the total sample of national adults, the margin of sampling error is ±8 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. All reported margins of sampling error include computed design effects for weighting.

Each sample of national adults includes a minimum quota of 60% cellphone respondents and 40% landline respondents, with additional minimum quotas by time zone within region. Landline and cellular telephone numbers are selected using random-digit-dial methods.

View survey methodology, complete question responses and trends.

Learn more about how the works.


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