The majority of American teachers think arming themselves with guns would make schools less safe, a newly released survey of educators across the country found.

It’s a question floated after every school shooting that gets national attention: Would armed teachers be able to stop a mass shooter in their tracks, possibly saving many lives?

There have been at least 24 shooting incidents on school campuses resulting in injury or death so far in 2023, according to a tracker by Education Week. Last week, the country marked one year since 19 students and two teachers were gunned down at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, marking the deadliest school shooting in the country since the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting nearly a decade prior.

One in five teachers surveyed about school safety by the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation said they feel schools would be safer if teachers were allowed to be armed. The majority, 54%, thought schools would be made less safe if teachers could carry, and another 26% said they didn’t think it would make a difference in school safety.

Gun rights or gun control?Is stopping gun violence more important than gun rights? Most Americans say yes, poll shows.

Still, most teachers said active shooters weren’t their No. 1 safety concern in the classroom.

Here’s what teachers think about safety in schools, according to the survey, conducted between Oct. 25 and Nov. 14, 2022, and released on Wednesday:

Hundreds of thousands of teachers would carry a gun in school if allowed, researchers estimate

The percentage of teachers who said they were strongly opposed to policies allowing teachers to carry guns on campus, 44%, was far higher than the percentage who said they strongly support them, 6%, the survey found.