Skip to main content
Illustration image for the Opportunities page header

Events

Learn about past and upcoming events and opportunities for your school or district.

Looking for grants? Visit the Grants Finder Tool to find applicable funding opportunities to help keep your school community safe.

Upcoming Events

Explore upcoming events such as webinars and conferences related to school safety.

No upcoming events found. Please try another search.

Past Events

Browse past events for ones you may have missed. You’ll also find supplemental event resources, including webinar recordings, scripts and more.

Icon for event
| Hosted by: Northwest Mental Health Technology Transfer Center
This session will provide information on school readiness for bullying prevention, what staff and students can do to create a safe school climate, and how school members can teach and reinforce prosocial behaviors.
Icon for event
| Hosted by: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Department of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention National Training and Technical Assistance Center
This webinar will provide current information on research and trends related to suicide among youth and teenagers in the United States. It will help adults working with youth identify signs of suicidal ideation, discuss how to provide effective mental health care to at-risk youth, and provide strategies for suicide prevention and intervention.
Icon for event
| Hosted by: Department of Education, Office of Elementary and Secondary Education’s Office of Safe and Supportive Schools, Office of National Drug Control Policy, National Center on Safe Supportive Learning Environments
This webinar will help practitioners understand how counterfeit medications and illicit substances are made available online and shipped directly to people in their homes. Presenters will discuss how the marketing of drugs, both for therapeutic use and recreational use, has shifted over time and how current messaging tactics may lead students to believe that their usage is both a social norm and safe.