Road safety campaigner: Why we pretended students had died
A school in Wisconsin summoned its students for an assembly to tell them four of their classmates had died in a road accident.
As they burst into tears, they were then told the four hadn't died after all: It was in fact a simulation as part of a road safety campaign.
The four classmates who'd been chosen to 'die' in this simulation were told ahead of time and were not permitted to use their phones to tip off classmates that they weren't actually dead.
Miranda Ryser, a 17-year-old member of the student council who arranged this drill, told 5 live's Phil Williams that fellow students reacted more "negatively" to the simulation than expected.
Brodhead School District Superintendent Leonard Lueck said the exercise was approved by the school's Principal but admitted it went "too far" and it detracted from the intended road safety message.
This clip is originally from Phil Williams, Wednesday 3 October 2016.
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
News—5 Live In Short
The best current affairs interviews, insight and analysis from 大象传媒 Radio 5 live.
More clips from 5 Live In Short
-
Martin Lewis urges people to lock into a fixed tariff
Duration: 00:50
-
'We're all so upset about this and quite frankly broken'
Duration: 00:51
-
MPs to vote on bill for assisted death for terminally ill
Duration: 01:25