British classrooms have seen almost 100 000 violent incidents in just three years, including poisonings, kidnappings, and other serious assaults. Police call‑outs to schools are up 23 percent, and officers logged 4 480 cases that involved weapons, nearly all of them knives.
Staff safety is also deteriorating. A recent NASUWT behaviour survey found 40 percent of teachers experienced physical abuse or violence from pupils in the previous 12 months.
A recent wake‑up call
On 3 February 2025 fifteen‑year‑old Harvey Willgoose was fatally stabbed during the lunch break at All Saints Catholic High School in Sheffield, forcing an immediate lockdown before emergency responders could arrive. The incident shows how quickly threats can escalate and how every second counts.
Why traditional plans fall short
- Corridor CCTV rarely covers playgrounds, car parks, or bus queues.
- Phone trees and walkie‑talkies create delays and confusion during stress.
- Staff must juggle door locks, police calls, and pupil roll calls simultaneously.
What an AI emergency management system does
An AI‑powered Emergency Management System (EMS) links existing cameras, sensors, and communications to:
- Detect threats in real time (fights, weapons, intruders, crowd surges).
- Automate next steps (instant lockdowns, audio alerts, mass texts, radio calls).
- Share live context (floor plans, video, exact locations) with police and medical teams.
- Guide recovery (digital roll‑call dashboards, reunification workflows, post‑event analytics).
Proof it works
When Angleton Independent School District in Texas combined ZeroEyes AI gun detection with the Raptor alert platform, verified firearm sightings reached staff and police in as little as three to five seconds, automatically locking doors and triggering evacuations.
How Coram’s AI EMS raises the bar
Coram’s Emergency Management System adds computer‑vision analytics to any ONVIF camera, verifies threats in under five seconds, and pushes alerts at the same time to radios, mobiles, and 999. The system records and alerts even if the school network drops, thanks to built‑in dual‑carrier cellular fail‑over.
“When seconds matter, software should handle the checklists so teachers can focus on students. Our platform delivers a clear, verified alert in under five seconds and keeps every stakeholder on the same page.” – Ashesh Jain, CEO, Coram
Deployment and funding tips
- Cover every zone – place cameras at entrances, playgrounds, sports fields, and car parks, not just corridors.
- Run multi‑agency drills – include police and ambulance services so everyone trusts the dashboards.
- Use role‑based views – head teachers, ICT leads, and local officers each see only the data they need.
- Tap capital grants – eligible academies and sixth‑form colleges can bid for the Department for Education’s Condition Improvement Fund (CIF) to offset EMS costs.
- Review analytics each term – heat maps and incident timelines help close lingering blind spots.
Conclusion
Knife crime and aggressive behaviour are rising on UK campuses, yet AI‑driven emergency management gives schools the speed and clarity to act before an incident spirals. The Sheffield tragedy underscores the stakes. Proven deployments abroad, and open‑platform options like Coram’s, offer a practical path to faster alerts, tighter coordination, and safer learning environments.
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