Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Education And Mental Health: Will Assessments Stop School Shootings?
Education And Mental Health: Will Assessments Stop School Shootings?
Jan 29, 2026 9:43 PM

that would require homeschooled and public school students to undergo mandatory mental health assessments.

The bill aims to “provide behavioral health assessments to children” and states the following:

“That section 10-206 of the general statutes be amended to require (1) each pupil enrolled in public school at grades 6, 8, 10 and 12 and each home-schooled child at ages 12, 14 and 17 to have a confidential behavioral health assessment, the results of which shall be disclosed only to the child’s parent or guardian, and (2) each health care provider performing a child’s behavioral health assessment plete the appropriate form supplied by the State Board of Education verifying that the child has received the assessment.”

Private school students would not be affected by this law, should it be passed.

This legislation is primarily in response to the school shooting at Newtown, Conn., where 26 children and adults were killed by Adam Lanza, who then took his own life. Lanza also killed his mother, Nancy, that day. In a lengthy interview with The New Yorker, Lanza’s father Peter recalls his son as “weird.” A teacher from Adam’s early years said of him “intelligent but not normal, with anti-social issues.” Adam was eventually diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome, a form of high-functioning autism, and his mother eventually decided to homeschool him.

In the aftermath of any tragedy, those closest to the situation ask, “Was there something we could have done to prevent this?” In airplane disasters, the black box is sought out and experts sift through data. After 9/11, the CIA and FBI (along with local government agencies) all wanted to know how they could have missed this massive terrorist attack. The question with school shootings is, can we predict who will be violent? Is there a test we can give to children that will show us who could be the next school shooter?

Unfortunately, we can’t.

Warning signs “only e crystal clear in the aftermath, said James Alan Fox, a Northeastern University criminology professor who has studied and written about mass killings.

“They’re yellow flags. They only e red flags once the blood is spilled,” he said.

It’s estimated that about 1 in 4 adults in the U.S. have a diagnosed mental disorder. Of course, most mental illness does not lead to violence. Even when it does, we have no way of predicting who will e violent and who is merely troubled. The FBI, which has produced prehensive guide to specific school threats, admits:

This model is not a “profile” of the school shooter or a checklist of danger signs pointing to the next adolescent who will bring lethal violence to a school. Those things do not exist.

State-mandated mental health testing will not stop school shootings. Further, such testing supersedes parental rights and authority over their children. It requires testing of children who show no signs of illness, and allows social services “free rein” to investigate a family. Dee Black, of the Home School Legal Defense Association, has this to say regarding Connecticut’s proposed legislation:

According to the Connecticut Behavioral Health Partnership, a state organization made up of the Department of Children and Families, Department of Social Services, Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, and others, a behavioral health assessment is prehensive and invasive. It includes ‘a review of physical and mental health, intelligence, school performance, employment, level of function in different domains including family situation, and behavior in munity.'”

“Bill 374 would essentially authorize the state to conduct regular social services investigations of homeschooling families without any basis to do so. It’s an unnecessary invasion of privacy and an intrusion into the life of a family.

Parents and their chosen health-care providers are still the best authorities on their children’s health and medical needs. Over-reaching legislation will not prevent tragedies, but will certainly erode parental rights.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Alexy II: The ‘Transitional’ Patriarch
Vladimir Berezansky, Jr., a U.S. lawyer with experience in Russia and former Soviet republics, recalls an interview with Russian Orthodox Patriarch Alexy II in 1991. Like many Russians at the time, the Patriarch was coping with a “disorienting change” following the fall of the Soviet Emprie, Berezansky writes. At the time, he seemed e by the changes taking place around him, and he did not know where to begin. “For our entire lives, we [clerics] were pariahs, and now we...
Colson Receives Presidential Citizens Medal
It is with a sense of great pride and joy that I join with thousands around the nation in congratulating Chuck Colson on his reception of the Presidential Citizen’s Medal presented to Chuck at the Oval Office today by President Bush. It is important to remember that the ministry that Chuck founded some 35 years ago is noteworthy not only because it has assisted in countless men and women to transform their lives through the power of a right relationship...
Avery Cardinal Dulles (1918-2008)
Avery Cardinal Dulles lecturing at the Acton Institute. I knew the reputation of Avery Dulles, SJ, long before I entered that classroom at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., back in the early 1980s when I was in seminary. I knew he was considered, even then, the dean of Catholic theologians in the United States, author of scholarly essays and books too numerous to name, peritus (theological expert) at the Second Vatican Council and the son of a...
Patriarch Alexy II: An Epoch Passes Away
The casket with the body of Patriarch Alexy II is displayed during a farewell ceremony in Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow, on December 6. Russian Orthodox Christians are holding memorial services and preparing for the Tuesday funeral of Patriarch Alexy II, the man who led the world’s largest Orthodox Church out of the Soviet era and into a period of remarkable rebirth and growth following decades of persecution and genocidal martyrdom at the hands of munist regimes. Carrying mourning...
The Heavens Declare
If you haven’t seen it yet, I highly mend the Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar (HT: Slashdot). Simply stunning. The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands. Day after day they pour forth speech; night after night they display knowledge. There is no speech or language where their voice is not heard. Their voice goes out into all the earth, their words to the ends of the world. In the heavens he has...
The Church and the Terror State
Patriarch Alexy II The Moscow Times reports on the funeral of Russian Patriarch Alexy II: Candles flickered and white-robed elders chanted prayers as the country bade farewell Tuesday to Patriarch Alexy II, who guided the country’s dominant Russian Orthodox Church through its remarkable recovery after decades of Communist-era repression. Nuns, believers and government officials looked on as prayers filled the soaring Christ the Savior Cathedral at a six-hour funeral service for Alexy, who died Friday at age 79. He was...
Books for Any Season
It’s the time of year when the experts among us proffer gift lists, a subset of which is book lists. I’ll spare you my own book list, per se, but it has been a while since I used this space to note some new titles of interest at the intersection of faith and economics. Here then, some noteworthy books (whether they are appropriate for those with whom you exchange Christmas presents, I leave to you): Are Economists Basically Immoral? A...
Acton Rome conference on philanthropy
The Catholic News Service has published a report on “Philanthropy and Human Rights: Creating Space for Caritas in Civil Society,” a conference held Dec. 3 in Rome by the Acton Institute. ROME (CNS) — Even at a time of global financial crisis, human beings need to give charity in order to be happy, said several speakers at a Rome conference on philanthropy and human rights. Expecting a government to provide all social services and assistance robs those who are economically...
Kathleen Parker and “Secular Reason”
Kathleen Parker has a major case of secular reason sickness and it needs to be cured. I’ll keep this short and simple. Here is an offensive line from one of Kat’s latest columns: How about social conservatives make their arguments without bringing God into it? By all means, let faith inform one’s values, but let reason inform one’s public arguments. Problem #1: Social conservatives very rarely argue for their public policy positions on the basis of straight-up revelation. It is...
Acton Experts on Giving, Finance
Zenit news service provides extensive coverage of two recent Acton-sponsored conferences in Rome. The first of half of Edward Pentin’s report focuses on Arthur Brooks‘ address at the “Philanthropy and Human Rights” gathering. A sample: His friend had found that when people gave, they became happier, and when they were happier they became richer. Brooks was subsequently converted, and the discovery changed his life. Moreover, now he realizes that people have as much need to give as they have to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved