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Home ShowsSafer Ed Safer Ed: Learning From Near Misses
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Safer Ed: Learning From Near Misses

Why “almost” incidents reveal the strongest signals of school safety culture

Safer Ed explores how learning from near misses in schools uncovers safety gaps and helps leaders prevent incidents before injuries occur.

Safer Ed begins with the moments schools rarely discuss—the near misses that almost become incidents, but quietly reveal safety risks.

A cart tips but doesn’t fall.

A chemical spills, but no one is injured.

A piece of equipment malfunctions, but class ends before it escalates.

Because these incidents stop short of harm, schools frequently move on without discussion. Yet near misses are not meaningless. They are early warning signals—indicators that something in the system didn’t work as intended, even if luck or timing prevented a more serious outcome.

This idea sits at the heart of Season 3’s opening episode of the Safer Ed Podcast, Learning from Near Misses: Signals in Schools. Rather than focusing only on emergencies, the episode and this article examines how schools can use near misses to strengthen safety culture before injuries occur.

Why Safety Is Too Often Treated as Binary

In many schools, safety is viewed in simple terms:

Either something went wrong, or it didn’t.

If no one was hurt, the moment is often framed as a success. But the absence of injury does not automatically mean systems worked correctly. Near misses frequently depend on chance, quick reactions, or favorable timing—not strong planning or design.

When schools only ask “Did anyone get hurt?”, they miss a more important question:

What allowed this to almost happen?

What Near Misses Reveal About School Systems

When schools pause and reflect, near misses tend to expose patterns rather than isolated mistakes. These moments often reveal:

  • Equipment stored too high or in unsafe locations

  • Workspaces that are crowded or poorly designed

  • Time pressures that encourage rushing

  • Procedures that rely on memory rather than structure

  • Mismatches between training, expectations, and reality

These conditions don’t disappear just because a spill was cleaned up or a class ended. The next group of students enters the same environment, facing the same risks.

Why Near Misses Go Unreported

Near misses sit in an uncomfortable middle ground. They feel serious—but not serious enough to demand attention on a busy school day.

There are also cultural barriers:

  • Fear of blame or judgment

  • Concern about paperwork or compliance

  • Worry about being labeled unsafe

  • Pressure to keep schedules moving

When reflection feels punitive instead of productive, silence becomes the default response.

Safer Ed and the Leadership Moments Most People Don’t See

The decision to pause—or to move on—is a leadership decision, even when it doesn’t feel like one.

Leadership isn’t only visible during emergencies. It’s visible in what schools choose to examine and what they choose to ignore. Schools that learn from near misses shift safety from reaction to prevention and from blame to shared responsibility.

Instead of asking “Who caused this?”, they ask:



“What conditions made this possible?”

That single shift changes the tone of safety conversations across a building.

A Simple Step Schools Can Take Immediately

One practical way to begin learning from near misses in schools is to normalize the conversation.

Ask regularly:

“What almost went wrong this week?”

When educators see that reporting leads to action—not punishment—they are more likely to speak up. Even small adjustments signal that leadership is listening and that safety matters.

Near Misses Buy Schools Time

Near misses are easy to ignore because they don’t demand attention. But they matter because they give schools something rare: time.

Time to learn.

Time to adjust.

Time to prevent harm before someone gets hurt.

Safety isn’t just about what goes wrong. It’s about what almost does—and what leaders choose to do next.

Listen to the Podcast

Safer Ed Podcast – Season 3, Episode 1

Learning from Near Misses: Signals in Schools

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