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Safety Expert: School Shootings Signal Need for Dads' Involvement
By Jim Brown and Jenni Parker
AgapePress
October 13, 2006
(AgapePress) -- A school safety expert says if the crisis of violence in America's schools is going to be curbed, it's necessary for fathers and father figures to play a more active role in their children's lives.
James Moore is the founder and president of the Springhill, Arkansas-based group WATCH D.O.G.S. His organization encourages fathers to get involved in the lives of their kids and other children by consistently visiting their schools and being "extra eyes and ears" on their campuses.
While addressing a recent summit on school violence hosted by President George W. Bush at the National 4-H Youth Center, Moore passionately spoke of how school violence has affected him personally, recalling in particular the impact a visit to the site of the Jonesboro school massacre (of March 24, 1998 in Craighead County, Arkansas) had on him.


In the Jonesboro incident, two armed middle school students, a 13-year old and an 11-year old, reportedly stole a van, loaded it with supplies and weapons -- including two semi-automatic rifles, four handguns, and a bolt-action rifle stolen from one of the boys' grandfather's house -- and proceeded to the school. One boy took the weapons to a nearby wood while the other set off a fire alarm and then joined his companion.
As teachers and children came out of the school, the boys opened fire on them, killing four female students and a teacher, and wounding another teacher and nine other students. After the incident, inquiries revealed that the young shooters were both fascinated with firearms, violent TV programs, and "gangster rap" music, and both were children of divorced parents.
Moore says about nine months ago he visited the Arkansas school where the two boys' committed this horrifying act of violence. "I saw where they were standing outside of the school, and they gunned down four kids and a teacher in cold blood," he notes; "and I'm watching that as a father and just thinking about the great people in that community and what they might [have been] thinking that night."
The founder of WATCH D.O.G.S. speculates that, probably, like every community that has gone through a similar tragedy, the residents of that Jonesboro community thought such a thing could never happen in their midst. That sort of thing "always happens 'over there,' wherever that elusive 'over there' is," he says.
"But that night it happened in that community," Moore continues, "and I thought, 'You know, if it can happen there, it can happen in a lot of places, and what are we going to do about it?'" He says he founded WATCH D.O.G.S. Across America in response to that tragic incident.
Today WATCH D.O.G.S. is a 501(c)3 educational organization that helps thousands of men to reconnect with their children at hundreds of schools across the country. The group urges fathers and "father figures" to come to their children's schools to eat, play, and read with their kids.
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