Secret Service Offers Training to Hundreds of Pennsylvania Educators and Safety Officials

More than 200 professionals attended the session, which focused on identifying troubled students and preventing violence.

Over 200 educators and police officers from across Pennsylvania gathered on Thursday to receive training from the U.S. Secret Service on how to identify signs that students are planning shootings or other acts of violence on campus.

The training was held at Council Rock High School South, the first to be held in the region since the Secret Service National Threat Assessment Center released a report analyzing 41 acts of violence on campuses that took place between 2008 and 2017. Pennsylvania has also been the site of increased fighting and violence in school alongside a rise in student depression, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer.

While the training was closed to the public, educators said the session focused on prevention and identification of troubled students. David Volkman, the executive deputy secretary of the state’s education department, told the audience that the department considers social workers crucial to addressing the issue of violence in schools, according to the Inquirer.

Robert Whartenby, the director of facilities for the Centennial School District in Bucks County, Penn., told the Inquirer that the training addressed patterns of behavior of past school shooters, including failing grades, alcohol and drug use, and troubles within the home.

“There really wasn’t a description, like, ‘OK, black trench coat, this guy must be somebody who’s going to do something to us,’” Whartenby said, stressing that educators need to “embrace the process” of consistently monitoring student behavior to ensure that kids receive the help they need.

While Pennsylvania has not been the site of a mass school shooting, the Secret Service report included four incidents of “targeted school violence involving a knife or blade” that happened between 2008 and 2017, according to the Inquirer. State officials have taken action to address some aspects of the violence problem, including the state attorney general’s launch of an anonymous threat reporting system in 2019.

Educators and school security officials were hopeful that the training and other events like it would help schools develop better processes for identifying troubled students. The event itself was the product of collaboration between the Secret Service and state Rep. Wendi Thomas, who requested the presentation after a school board member brought her one of the agency’s reports.

About the Author

Haley Samsel is an Associate Content Editor for the Infrastructure Solutions Group at 1105 Media.

Featured

  • 2025 Secure Campus Award Winners Announced

    Campus Security Today is pleased to announce the 2025 Secure Campus Award winners. Twenty companies are being recognized this year for products that help keep education and business campuses safe. Read Now

  • K-12 School Safety Trends Report Shows Training, Technology Are Saving Lives

    CENTEGIX, the industry leader and most widely adopted wearable safety technology provider for K-12 education, today released its 2025 School Safety Trends Report, the only comprehensive and data-rich analysis of school safety available in the wearable panic button market. The report identifies and outlines the top tech and legislative movements relevant to school safety in the U.S. and draws on data collected in the 2024/2025 school year through the CENTEGIX Safety Platform, including more than 265,000 incidents of CrisisAlert use. Read Now

  • Survey: Fewer Than 20 Percent of School Leaders Consider Their Main Entrance “Completely Secure”

    Singlewire Software, provider of solutions that help keep people safe and informed, releases the findings of its inaugural School Entrance Security Report, which captured responses from more than 500 school staff members across the United States. This research highlights the concerns and challenges schools are facing in securing their entrances and keeping students and staff safe from potential threats Read Now

  • Securing Higher Education: Combating Enrollment Fraud and Empowering Student Financial Success

    Higher education institutions are facing a costly and growing crisis: enrollment fraud. Between 2020 and 2022, the cost[1] of acquiring a new student surged by up to 32%, straining already tight budgets. At the same time, “ghost students” using stolen identities to enroll fraudulently put institutions at even greater financial risk. Read Now