27
Central Office “Key to Safety”

Central Office “Key to Safety”

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Central Office “Key to Safety”. Situational Awareness. What’s T he Real Issue?. JDLR. Something or Somebody that “Just Doesn’t Look Right” Document it Report it to a supervisor. Basic Safety Rules Continued. Watch The Hands If you are going to get hurt, it will come from the hands. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Central Office “Key to Safety”

Page 2: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

© 2014 MSBA

Situational Awareness

Page 3: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

What’s The Real Issue?

Page 4: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Something or Somebody that “Just Doesn’t Look Right”◦Document it◦Report it to a supervisor

JDLR

Page 5: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Watch The Hands

If you are going to get hurt, it will come from the hands.

Basic Safety Rules Continued

Page 6: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Good communication skills are key to a successful outcome.

Communicator MUST be open and unbiased

Tactical Communications

Page 7: Central Office  “Key to Safety”
Page 8: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

99% of violent encounters begin with a verbal altercation.

◦“The cocked tongue is the most dangerous weapon.”-George Thompson “The Gentle Act of Persuasion”

Tactical Communications

Page 9: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Tactical Communications

Communicating to the receiver

o Message content = 7-10%

o Voice = 33-40%

o ONV (other non-verbal) = 50-60%

Page 10: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Listening does NOT come naturally.

Learn to project a “listening face,” act as if you care.

For many people, listening is nothing more than waiting for a chance to interrupt.

Active Listener

Page 11: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Paraphrasing (rephrase and simplify): to restate something using other words, especially in order to make it simpler or shorter.

Active Listener

Page 12: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Paraphrasing allows you to:◦interrupt gracefully◦control the situation◦clarify the meaning◦ask, “Did I get it right?”◦create empathy

Active Listener

Page 13: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Ultimate Emphatic Statement:

“Let me be sure I heard what you just

said.”

Verbal Deflection

Page 14: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

The words “BUT” or “HOWEVER” are transitions words. ◦I hear what you are saying and I understand.

◦“However/ But”, I’m not the person that can resolve this issue. I will be glad to get someone who can assist you.

Verbal Deflection Techniques

Page 15: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

The more the subject raises his/her voice, the more you should talk low and slow. This will usually help bring them back down.

Always act as if you are being recorded, you probably are.

Verbal Deflection Techniques

Page 16: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Come here.You wouldn’t understand.What do you want me to do about it?

What’s your problem? ◦Or I don’t see the problem.

Phrases You NEVER Use

Page 17: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

ASK (Ethical Appeal)◦You are making an honest, sincere request for them to comply. Watch your tone, words used and your demeanor.

Set Context (Reasonable Appeal)◦Explain “why” you are asking (e.g. state law, policy, rule).

Review

Page 18: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Present Options: (Personal Appeal)

◦People act out of selfish interest; show empathy.

◦Give desired options first.

◦Explain if they don’t leave, you will have to call a supervisor and you don’t want to go that route. You’d like to work it out between the two of you.

Review

Page 19: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Confirm (Practical Appeal)◦Is there anything I can say to get you to cooperate?

ACT (Your options have ran out.) ◦If you are calling 911 be prepared to

physically defend yourself.

Review

Page 20: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Use whatever you have to protect yourself.

Wasp spray, pencils, stapler, tape dispenser.

The Confrontation Turns Physical

Page 21: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

If subject is close enough, there are three quick ways to neutralize the threat.

◦Gouge eyes

◦Strike throat

◦Strike groin

The Confrontation Turns Physical

Page 22: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

If you have to use physical force, be committed to your actions.

◦You can not just be “involved” you need to be “committed” to it.

The Confrontation Turns Physical

Page 23: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

What is the difference between being involved and being committed?

Page 24: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Train/Practice more than once a year.

Under stress, you will react the way you are trained.

Your body can’t go where your mind has never been.

Things to Consider

Page 25: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

What questions do you have?

Page 26: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

Thank you for your

commitment and

professionalism

In making our school’s run smoothly.

Page 27: Central Office  “Key to Safety”

MISSOURI CENTER FOR EDUCATION

SAFETY

GARY MOORE

E-MAIL: [email protected]

WEB SITE: WWW.MOCES.ORG