-
Wrexham manager glad Ryan Reynolds on hand for heroics against Forest
-
Arrests reported, cross removed as China crackdown on unofficial churches grows
-
Wrexham ride 'rollercoaster' to knock Nottingham Forest out of FA Cup
-
Mavs' Davis has ligament damage in left hand: report
-
Mavs' Davis has ligament damaged in left hand: report
-
Australia declares state of disaster as bushfires rage
-
Morocco coach Regragui urges calm as hosts reach AFCON last four
-
Koepka applies for PGA Tour reinstatement: reports
-
Bath and Edinburgh close in on Champions Cup last 16
-
Anger over Minneapolis shooting probe fuels protests
-
Hosts Morocco march on to AFCON semis as Senegal reach last four
-
Trump pitches Venezuela oil to US majors - and hits skepticism
-
Ebnoutalib scores on debut as Dortmund drop points at Frankfurt
-
Winter Olympic organisers insist ice hockey arena ready despite hole in rink
-
Diaz scores again as hosts Morocco beat Cameroon to reach AFCON semis
-
Minneapolis asks to join probe into woman's killing by immigration officer
-
MLB hands German outfielder Kepler 80-game doping ban
-
MLB hands German outfielder Kepler 80-game doing ban
-
Brazil's Endrick says Lyon 'ideal club' to boost World Cup ambitions
-
Brew, smell, and serve: AI steals the show at CES 2026
-
Young 'ecstatic' about NBA move from Hawks to Wizards
-
Trump meets oil executives, says $100 bn pledged for Venezuela
-
Venezuela says in talks with US to restore diplomatic ties
-
De Klerk fireworks guide Bengaluru to victory in WPL opener
-
Uganda's Kiplimo seeks third world cross country crown in a row
-
Olympic ice hockey arena will be ready for Games: IOC director
-
Recalled Ndiaye takes Senegal past 10-man Mali into AFCON semis
-
'Devastated' Switzerland grieves New Year inferno victims
-
Man pleads guilty to sending 'abhorrent messages' to England women's footballer Carter
-
PGA Tour unveils fall slate with Japan, Mexico, Bermuda stops
-
'Unhappy' Putin sends message to West with Ukraine strike on EU border
-
Fletcher defends United academy after Amorim criticism
-
Kyiv mayor calls for temporary evacuation over heating outages
-
Families wait in anguish for prisoners' release in Venezuela
-
Littler signs reported record £20 million darts deal
-
'Devastated' Switzerland grieves deadly New Year fire
-
Syria threatens to bomb Kurdish district in Aleppo as fighters refuse to evacuate
-
Britain's Princess Catherine 'deeply grateful' after year in cancer remission
-
Russia joins Chinese, Iran warships for drills off South Africa
-
40 white roses: shaken mourners remember Swiss fire victims
-
German trial starts of 'White Tiger' online predator
-
Stocks rise despite mixed US jobs data
-
'Palestine 36' director says film is about 'refusal to disappear'
-
US December hiring misses expectations, capping weak 2025
-
Switzerland 'devastated' by fire tragedy: president
-
Rosenior not scared of challenge at 'world class' Chelsea
-
Polish farmers march against Mercosur trade deal
-
Swiatek wins in 58 minutes as Poland reach United Cup semis
-
Ski great Hirscher pulls out of Olympics, ends season
-
'War is back in vogue,' Pope Leo says
US parents' dilemma: how to discuss school shootings without scaring kids
When Elizabeth Barese picked up her 11-year-old son from school on Monday, she knew she had to tell him that a shooting had happened the same day at the school neighboring their family home in Nashville.
"We're right next door and there was a police presence," the 47-year-old told AFP. "I had to address it right away with him."
Standing in front of the crosses erected outside the entrance to The Covenant School bearing the names of the six victims, three of them young children, Barese said: "It's not a conversation you want to have with your kids."
"It's a delicate balance of being honest with your kids and not scaring them."
The same dilemma is being faced by countless American parents in the face of yet another school shooting to rock the country, leaving them needing to comfort their children, all the while reeling from their own anguish and fear.
Gun violence is a constant in the United States, a country of about 330 million people awash with more than 400 million guns.
Schools have not been spared, with assaults on educational institutions strikingly common.
Since the Columbine High School massacre in 1999, there have been 376 school shootings across the country, according to data gathered by The Washington Post, with 199 people killed and 424 injured. All told, the data shows more than 348,000 students exposed to gun violence at their school.
For US parents, those growing numbers mean a persistent worry that their children's school could be next.
A 2022 Pew Research Center survey found that roughly a third of parents of school-aged children said they were "very or extremely" worried.
After the shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, that left 21 people dead, Barese said she wrote a post on social media reading, "I don't know when the next one is going to happen but I hope to God it's not Nashville."
"But I know there's going to be another one."
- 'Why did kids get killed?' -
Xsavier Cleary, who lives some 30 miles (50 kilometers) from the Covenant elementary school, came to pay his respects with his own kids' safety on his mind.
"We just wonder now, are our kids still safe in schools?" he said.
On Monday, he said his children, aged from three to 22, could not escape talk of the shooting, in which a 28-year-old heavily armed shooter broke into the small private Christian school and killed six people -- three staff and three students.
"The kids was like, 'Dad, they're talking about the shooting everywhere, the radio, the school, the news, the TV... why did kids get killed?'" he said.
"We never thought we'd have to talk to our kids about things like this at this age," he said, shaking his head.
"They're in elementary school and we have to tell them about what to do and prepare for, if something like this happens."
Shooting drills have proliferated at schools in the United States, such as one Barese witnessed at her child's school.
"It made me cry," she said, her voice cracking with emotion.
After the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2012, in which 20 children and six adults were killed, her then-three-year-old daughter's preschool began active shooter drills -- a fact that made her "want to throw up," she said.
- 'Reassure' -
But Barese, who has called Tennessee home for 18 years, said she's grateful for the advice her son's school offered on how to broach Monday's tragedy.
"They didn't want the kids talking to their friends. They wanted the information to come from the parents. They wanted the information to be honest, and to not give more information than was needed," she said.
Following the guidance, she answered her children's questions, but watched the news in another room.
US psychologists have for years provided resources to help parents deal with these discussions.
The National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) put tips online for parents and teachers on talking to children about violence, including in schools.
Number one on the list: "Reassure children that they are safe. Emphasize that schools are very safe," underlining the difference between the "possibility" of something happening and its "probability."
That is easier said than done, said another mother, who didn't want to give her name and works at the hospital where some of the Covenant School victims were brought.
"You want to assure them that they're safe," she said, tears in her eyes. "We're saying those words but we don't believe them."
A.Mahlangu--AMWN