Saturday, November 18, 2006
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http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2006/11/18/news/state/18_39_4911_17_06.txt
School fits gun education into sixth grade curriculum
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By: DAN JOLING - Associated Press
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Tom Milliron figures Juneau school children are
going to encounter guns one way or another, whether venturing armed
into nearby wilderness or visiting the home of a friend.
Better they learn how to handle a firearm safely than to hurt
themselves through ignorance, he says.
Milliron is principal of one of Juneau's two middle schools.
Sixth-graders under his care last month completed an outdoor
education course that included instruction in safe handling of guns
and firing rounds from .22-caliber rifles. For some children, it was
the first time they'd touched a gun.
In gun-happy Alaska, teaching children how to safely handle firearms
is just common sense, Milliron said.
"Kids ought to be approached from a solid educational perspective and
not discover guns on their own," Milliron said.
Juneau, population 31,193, can be reached only by water or air. It's
in the heart of America's largest national forest, the Tongass.
Juneau's front yard is the Inside Passage, the protected Pacific
waters off Alaska's Panhandle. Its backyard is the Juneau Icefield, a
1,500-square-mile blanket of ice that feeds 38 glaciers. Most
residents hike, ski, fish, hunt or kayak.
"That's what makes it worth it," Milliron said of living in temperate
rain forest. "We certainly don't live here for the weather."
Sitka blacktail deer abound in the forest. Black bears often wander
into the city during seasonal migrations, stopping to dine on garbage
or bird seed if residents leave them unprotected. Grizzly bears are
kings of the forest, especially on nearby islands.
"A lot of people who aren't hunters carry firearms for that reason,"
Milliron said.
Milliron used to teach in Cube Cove, a logging camp on Admiralty
Island. Outdoor education was crucial in such a wild setting, he
said. He took the job at Juneau's Floyd Dryden Middle School eight
years ago and found volunteers who wanted firearm education in public
schools, including Tom Coate.
More than two decades ago, Coate had taught his 10-year-old son,
Tobin, how to safely handle guns before they went waterfowl hunting.
Then his son's friends wanted to go too. They were "dumber than a
brick" about gun safety, Coate said.
He helped promote hunter safety programs in a 4-H club, then at rural
village schools, and starting in 2000, at the Juneau middle school.
About 1,200 students have taken the course.
The program has provided a counterbalance to the portrayal of guns on
"the idiot tube," Coate said.
"What we're trying to do is mitigate the onslaught of very bad habits
that cause needless deaths and needless accidents," Coate said.
Guns are simply a way of life in Southeast Alaska, Milliron and Coate said.
"For every home that doesn't have a firearm it in, there are 25 that
do," Coate said.
Sixth grade, when students are still in awe of teachers, is the
perfect setting to teach gun safety, Milliron said.
"In sixth grade, we can get kids to internalize the need to practice
safety around firearms," he said. "They're willing to listen to
instructors and take to heart what instructors tell them."
As part of their outdoors education, students take the standard state
of Alaska hunter safety education course. After safety lessons, they
take a "shoot-don't shoot" field course, deciding whether it would
have been safe to discharge a weapon at an animal simulated by a silhouette.
They also must demonstrate proficiency in firing a weapon, shooting
20 rounds from .22-caliber rifles at Juneau's indoor firing range.
Taylor Daniels, 11, learned she should never direct a muzzle at
another person and never shoot across a highway. She learned that
keeping a rifle's action open will render it inoperative, and that
the barrel wiggles far less if she's kneeling instead of standing
when she shoots.
Phillip Fenumiai, 12, said he felt confident he can handle a rifle.
"If someone asked me, I could do the proper things and learn how to
keep myself safe and make sure I'm handling it safely," he said.
The program has not been adopted at the city's other middle school.
"I think the administrators feeling on it was that that was something
we felt families would support rather than school," said Barb Mecum,
principal of Dzantik'i Heeni Middle school.
But even gun control advocates don't have much reaction to programs
that teach gun safety, such as the one in Juneau.
"We generally don't have much of a problem with them as long as the
actual firing of weapons is off campus and there's the appropriate
law enforcement, professional trainers, present," said Peter Hamm,
communications director for the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.
"We think it's far better that people know how to safely handle a
firearm than not know," he said.
Sixth grade is an appropriate age for training, as long as parents
approve, he said.
Besides gun safety, children took lessons on appropriate outdoor
clothing, wildlife conservation, and reading a compass and a
topographical map. They learned hunting ethics and meat care --
turning Bullwinkle into an entree.
Milliron says the class does not try to turn the sixth graders into
little hunters. If they do, it's a good, healthy activity that will
last a lifetime, he said.
Milliron said students love the program.
"It's education that's real life. It's not, 'Why am I learning this,"' he said.
"They won't remember the first time they learned to divide a
polynomial, but they will remember the first time they fired a rifle
and learned firearm safety," he said.
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