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Black Collegian News & Views
Colleges Turn to Text-Messaging for Emergencies
By Kai Beasley
Black College Wire
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Photos by Irving Johnson III/Xavier University
Xavier University has a new e2 Campus text messaging system that
is to immediately send critical information to the entire Xavier
community when needed, via personal cell phones or other mobile
devices. |
With a wary eye toward the shootings at Virginia Tech, students and
administrators at some of the nation's historically black colleges and
universities are looking to the latest technology, from global
positioning satellite technology (GPS) tracking to text messaging, to
make campuses safer.
"It's really about staying ahead of the curve," said Mable Scott,
associate vice president for development and university relations at
North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro. "It's not an exact
science. We just hope and pray that everything in our protocols will
help us to be able to communicate with our students better in emergency
situations."
Virginia Tech officials had sent out e-mail alerts during the
shooting rampage that killed more than 30 people on its campus, as the
Chronicle of Higher Education reported. "But few people there received
them. Students have stopped relying on e-mail for information, say many
college administrators. That trend is prompting colleges to try new
technology to immediately notify everyone on a campus of an emergency.
Many of the services are built around the ubiquitous cellphone," the
Chronicle said.
A&T adopted a notification system that utilizes the campus Web site,
campus e-mails and listservs, the campus radio station and Aggie Net, a
system of television screens that display current information on
emergencies throughout the campus.
For many schools, the primary system of notification is the Internet.
Students are alerted to emergency situations via campus e-mail. But
black college students and officials say the majority of them don't use
their campus e-mail addresses.
"If something like that were to happen here, we wouldn't be
prepared," said Brett Boles, a junior business administration major at
Florida A&M University, in Tallahassee. "Messages just aren't relayed in
time for people to react."
"At my school, the campus e-mail is just too much of a hassle to
use," Boles said. "You have to register for a new password to get into
your e-mail every few months or so and it's too much. Off-campus e-mail
addresses are just easier to deal with."
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Reuben Battley, left, Gabrielle Jackson and Julius Tonzel check
the validation codes to confirm their participation in Xavier's
e2 Campus text messaging system. |
Boles cited the unreliable nature of the school's Internet service as
a serious deterrent to campus e-mail use, making it an erratic method
for reaching students when there is a crisis.
The problem is not limited to FAMU. Scott and Korell Pierson, a
junior history major at Morgan State University in Baltimore, say the
untrustworthiness of campus servers also poses a problem at their
institutions. Officials at all three schools said they were working to
remedy the shortcoming.
Pierson also took issue with on-campus security. "A lot of the cops
are sociable with the students. A lot of them take classes here so they
only care about giving the occasional ticket every once in awhile and
not much else," said Pierson. "There also aren't enough of them on
campus. For a concert, you'll only have like five police officers to
cover the whole thing."
Many black colleges appear to believe that new technology offers the
most efficient and cost-effective means of improving security.
The e2 notification system, now in use by schools such as FAMU,
Maryland's Bowie State University, Xavier University in New Orleans and
Coppin State University, also in Maryland, is Internet-based and
automatically sends emergency notification to students through their
e-mails, cellular phones and PDAs. This comes at a cost of about $1 per
student annually and requires each student to register his or her
contact information with the university.
Xavier began using the system in March. School officials report that
more than 1,200 of the 3,600 students and faculty members are
registered.
One of the more innovative products on the market comes from
Zylaya Inc. of
Gaithersburg, Md.
The Zylaya system combines the features of emergency notification
with emergency tracking via GPS. Zylaya takes emergency notification to
the next level. The system uses text messaging, global positioning key
chains, personal and public display devices and wireless sensors
distributed throughout campus to communicate information to students and
security teams on the ground. Zylaya's product also diminishes outside
threats to campuses by giving school officials the option of identifying
and tracking students and visitors via GPS.
"We can provide safety groups with information about what is
happening and where it's happening," said Beth Wingerd, vice president
of marketing at Zylaya.
The week of the Virginia Tech shootings, in which student Seung-Hui
Cho shot and killed 32 others, and then himself, "there was definitely a
higher sense of emergency. Colleges are wondering how they can make sure
to get the messages out to the people that need to get them," Wingerd
said.
Packages cost from $25,000 to $250,000, depending on the elements of
the package, and the price would probably add about $100 per student per
year.
Zylaya has not closed any deals with historically black colleges, but
Wingerd said the company was in talks with a number of them.
New technologies and increased police presence are important parts of
the security puzzle, but some see the unique nature of black college
campuses and their student bodies as playing a major role in college
safety
Mortimer Neufville, executive vice president at the National
Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges and former
provost at the University of Maryland, Eastern Shore, said, "I have
found the situation at black colleges to be somewhat different. The
environment is somewhat more intimate and students are usually far more
conscious of their surroundings. The relative size of most campuses also
facilitates closer observation of unusual and destructive behavior.
Students may also be quicker to provide peer counseling or seek campus
professional help."
Greater interconnectedness and student awareness of their
surroundings seems to be at the center of making black college campuses
safer places.
Xavier credits Student Government Association President Crystal Moore
with spearheading the move to e2 there.
A&T's Scott attributed the evolution of that university's security
protocols to student input; specifically with regard to the use of text
messages. "Text messaging is what's hot right now, and we have to pay
attention to what's hot so that we can find what really works," she
said.
"More than anything, the answer is the students," Scott said.
"Student involvement is important for security and finding what really
works."
Kai Beasley is a senior at Emory University who
writes a weekly column for the Villanovan at Villanova University. To
comment, e-mail bcwire@hotmail.com
Posted April 30, 2007 |