I was lucky to attend primary school in a pretty peaceful times, so each alarm was treated by me and my classmates seriously, but also with excitement, as it was meaning lessons were interrupted and therefore shortened. I don't know however how current students are reacting to them now, especially since the full-scale Russian invasion of neighbourimg Ukraine had started.
Back in the day ... at my schools we had random fire alarms. That involved all of us emptying out of school to an assigned safe spot and waiting for the all clear. Not much fun in cold or wet weather since we were not supposed to stop for anything. When I worked at the bank we had fire drills too, but usually they were after we had done serving customers. Mainly the assigned security person would check to be sure everything was locked up when we hurriedly left the building.
There are some updates (translation and spelling) to this post, because I was preparing it on mobile device and the "beloved" auto-correct had its "improvements". Sorry for the inconvenience.
Back in the day ... at my schools we had random fire alarms. That involved all of us emptying out of school to an assigned safe spot and waiting for the all clear. Not much fun in cold or wet weather since we were not supposed to stop for anything. When I worked at the bank we had fire drills too, but usually they were after we had done serving customers. Mainly the assigned security person would check to be sure everything was locked up when we hurriedly left the building.
There are some updates (translation and spelling) to this post, because I was preparing it on mobile device and the "beloved" auto-correct had its "improvements". Sorry for the inconvenience.