Free Crisis Response Protocol Template
A step-by-step guide for handling behavioral emergencies in schools. Every school needs a documented protocol — this template gives you a starting point.
Why Every School Needs a Crisis Protocol
Behavioral emergencies — self-harm indicators, aggressive outbursts, acute distress — require immediate, structured response. Without a documented protocol, schools react inconsistently, lose critical time, and risk student safety. This template provides a framework you can adapt to your school’s structure.
Inconsistent Response
Without a protocol, different staff respond differently. One teacher calls parents, another calls the principal, a third does nothing. Inconsistency puts students at risk.
Lost Time
Hesitation in crisis can have serious consequences. When staff don’t know what to do or who to call, precious minutes are lost. A protocol eliminates hesitation.
Legal & Compliance Risk
Documented protocols protect students and the institution. Without one, your school is exposed to liability if a crisis is mishandled. Compliance starts with documentation.
What the Template Includes
Crisis Identification Criteria
What constitutes a behavioral emergency. Clear definitions of self-harm indicators, aggressive outbursts, and acute distress.
Immediate Response Steps
Who to contact, what to do, in what order. A clear sequence of actions that eliminates hesitation during a crisis.
Role Assignments
Principal, teacher, counselor, admin responsibilities. Everyone knows their role before a crisis happens, not during one.
Parent Notification Protocol
When and how to contact parents. Templates for crisis communication that are clear, compassionate, and actionable.
Professional Referral Pathway
How to connect students with external support. Referral contacts, documentation requirements, and handoff procedures.
Post-Crisis Follow-Up Framework
Documentation, debriefing, and ongoing support. What happens after the crisis is just as important as what happens during.
Protocol Flow Preview
Teacher identifies emergency indicators — self-harm references, aggressive threats, or acute distress signals.
Immediate alert to principal and parent. No delays. No waiting to see if it resolves on its own.
Student safety ensured — do not leave student alone. A designated staff member stays with the student at all times.
Assess need for external emergency services. Call 112 if immediate medical or police intervention is required.
Document the incident. Time-stamped, factual, comprehensive. What was observed, what was done, who was notified.
Professional referral initiated. Connect the student and family with a licensed child psychologist or counselor.
Post-crisis debrief and follow-up plan. Review what worked, what didn’t, and update protocols accordingly.
This template is a starting framework. It does not replace professional crisis intervention training, legal advice, or your school’s existing safety policies. All schools should consult with legal counsel and mental health professionals when developing crisis protocols.
Download the Free Protocol Template
Fill in your details and we’ll email you the PDF immediately. No spam. No cost.
Indian Mental Health Emergency Contacts
If you or someone you know is in crisis, reach out to these helplines. All are confidential and free.