Response to Campus Shootings: Kristina Anderson

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  • Опубліковано 28 кві 2014
  • Kristina Anderson is a survivor of the Virginia Tech tragedy and the founder of Koshka Foundation for Safe Schools, a non-profit which creates resources and content for raising the level of awareness toward campus safety for students, parents and educators. The foundation also works to provide resources and support for survivors of trauma. Kristina started the non-profit after surviving a school shooting at Virginia Tech on April 16th, 2007. Kristina was shot 3 times -- twice in her back and once in her toe -- while attending an Intermediate French class. She became one of the most critically injured survivors with the largest number of casualties in her classroom. Thanks to a genius surgeon, strong family, and an immense outpouring of support, Kristina made a full recovery and proudly returned to Virginia Tech to finish her degree in International Studies and Foreign Languages. As her perspective on life has significantly changed, Kristina travels extensively for trainings and presentations on emergency preparedness, safety, and motivational speaking with law enforcement and corporate audiences. Ms. Anderson is also co-founder of LiveSafe, a personal safety mobile application that promotes a crowd sourced approach in preventing crime.
    On April 2, 2014, the UWT Criminal Justice League and the Social Work Student Organization sponsored an evening of discussion about the prevention, response, and aftermath of campus shootings. Kristina Anderson, a survivor of the Virginia Tech mass shooting and founder of Koshka Foundation for Safe Schools, was joined by a panel of experts from the community including Dr. Eric Madfis (UWT Criminal Justice Professor), Susan Wagshul-Golden (UWT Director of Campus Safety & Security), and Amber Bradford (Mental Health Therapist at the Children's Advocacy Center).
    The University of Washington Tacoma / Be Boundless
    Website: www.tacoma.uw.edu
    Facebook: / uwtacoma
    Twitter: / uwtacoma
    Instagram: / uwtacoma
    LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/edu/school?i...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4

  • @AntiMasonic93
    @AntiMasonic93 Рік тому

    33 people died. 33 is one of the highest degrees in freemasonry. Mrs. Anderson-Froling told us what the official story is. What needs to be explained is the infamous number of 33.

  • @Gerardo-dt8xf
    @Gerardo-dt8xf 2 роки тому +2

    h i