Submit Anonymous Tips

You can now submit anonymous tips to the St. Joseph High School.

If you see something suspicious in your school or have specific information about bullying, threats, or other issues that might make your school unsafe, please submit any information, photos, or videos using the instructions below.

Tips will be reviewed by trained school personnel, who may respond to ask for more details and continue the anonymous conversation with you. Tips are entirely anonymous, and your information is not shared with your tip.

Please do not use this form to report emergencies or requests that require immediate attention. In an emergency, always call 911. If you have a non-emergency request for agency assistance, please contact us at 361-573-2446.

Option 1 – Submit a Tip Via Text Message

To send an anonymous tip via text message to the St. Joseph High School, text the keyword FLYERS411 and your tip to 847411.

Option 2 – Download the St. Joseph High School Mobile App

Click the button below to download for free the St. Joseph High School app for iOS or Android and submit anonymous tips to school personnel from your mobile device. The app will also allow you to view important alerts that we publish.

Option 3 – Use the Online Form

Use the form below to submit your anonymous tip online. After submitting a tip using the web service, you will be assigned a six-digit code with numbers and letters. That is your anonymous ID to log back into the system.

What is a Helpful Tip?

Not all ‘tips’ are helpful. To ensure that you are contributing useful information, be sure to include as much information as you can that answers the questions: Who, What, When, Where, and How you know. See examples of helpful tips below:

Not in-progress emergencies

Not helpful: "I need help now!"

Helpful: "I’ve been being bulled for the last 3 weeks by John Doe in math class."

Suspicious activity

Not Helpful: "I’m suspicious of my classmate."

Helpful: "There have been a lot of kids hanging around locker 245. Many kids go in to the locker and look suspicious when they take things out and hide them in their backpacks."