Upload
jemima-quinn
View
215
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
11
Bruce Elementary School-wide Discipline Plan
2010-2011
581 South Bellevue Boulevard
Memphis, Tennessee 38104Martha J. Tipton, Principal
22
Guiding Principles
Beliefs• Academic success is our primary focus.
• Every student should learn to respect themselves, peers, faculty, staff, administrators, and community members.
• Reading and writing are essential elements in the learning process.
• Instruction should take place through a variety of approaches.
33
School Character Points• Brilliant Individuals Preparing for Tomorrow• Respectful of Self and Others• Unified for Success• Caring, Cooperative and Creative• Eager to Learn
Values• Each student is a unique person with dignity and worth,
and has the ability and right to learn.
• Parents and community members provide a variety of opportunities for students to develop a positive self-concept and possibilities for academic success.
44
Vision
At Bruce Elementary School we envision a learning community composed of parents, students, faculty and neighborhood stakeholders who embrace data-driven instruction and respond to the diversity of the student population.
55
Mission
Our mission is to recognize the uniqueness of each student and to provide challenging programs that promote academic, social, physical, and aesthetic development essential for becoming a productive citizen in the 21st Century.
66
Philosophy Statement
Our philosophy is to provide an educational approach which encourages the development of aesthetic, social, physical, creative and emotional aspects of each student. As caring and attentive role models, we will provide Bruce students with the guidance necessary to prepare them for future academic and emotional challenges.
77
Goals and/or Objectives
Our primary goal is to increase the amountof time on task in every classroom.Our objectives are:• Decrease the number of student referrals
by 50%• Decrease the number of Out-of-School
Suspensions by 50%• Decrease the number of students referred
to In-School Suspension by 50%
88
MCS Discipline Committee Worksheet 2009-2010
Name of School:Bruce ElementaryDiscipline Committee is
representative of the school faculty and
includes an administrator.
Fill in the names of committeemembers and designate a TeamLeader (TL)
*Indicates members mandated by MEA contract
Principal* Martha J. Tipton
Assistant Principal None
Professional School Counselor*Theresa Herington
School Psychologist
General Education Teacher(s) Lisa Waddell
MEA Representative*Myra Terry
Elected Teacher(s) (2) Loretta Farmer, Estella Phipps
Special Education Teacher(s)* Marilyn James
Related Arts Teacher(s) Danny Gullett, P.E. Teacher
Students
Educational Assistant(s)/ Non-Certified Staff
Community Member
Parent(s)* Charlotte Golden, Tiffany Jones
Central Office or Board of Education Member
Cafeteria Staff
Bus Driver
Other ISS Assistant (Thomas Alexander)
99
Discipline Committee
• The Discipline Committee will meet according to meeting schedule and as necessary.
• Team Leader, Loretta Farmer will be responsible for compiling data from the DATA Website.
• A Complete Meeting Schedule for the year is included as part of our School-wide Dicipline Plan.
1010
Meeting ScheduleSee Next Slide for Further Instructions
20 Day Reporting Period
Approximate Dates of Reporting Periods
All data for period entered into system (A)
Discipline Committee meeting dates (B)
Faculty meeting dates to report interpretation of 20 day data (C)
1 8/10/09-9/4/09 9/17/09 9/22/09 9/23/09
2 9/8/09-10/5/09 10/14/09 10/20/09 10/21/09
3 10/6/09-11/4/09 11/10/09 11/17/09 11/18/09
4 11/5/09-12/7/09 12/11/09 12/15/09 12/16/09
5 12/8/09-1/20/10 1/22/10 1/26/10 1/27/10
6 1/21/10-2/18/10 2/22/10 2/23/10 2/24/10
7 2/19/10-3/18/10 3/22/10 3/23/10 4/24/10
8 3/19/10-4/23/10 4/23/10 4/29/10 4/29/10
9 4/26/10-5/21/10 5/27/10 5/27/10 5/27/10
1111
(A)Data should be entered promptly to enable review of accurate data. Deadline for data entry is the Friday following the end of the reporting period.Principal should identify person responsible for entering behavior data. Name and title of data entry designee: Deanna Cole, General Office Secretary(B)Committee should meet within one week of final data entry for reporting period. Enter projected meeting dates in this column.Identify team member responsible for data summary to report to Discipline Committee.Name and title: Loretta Farmer, Team Leader
Determine how you wish to examine your data: by location, by student, by infraction, by time of day, number of referrals per day per month. Also consider office referral procedures and data integrity. (C)Faculty meeting to discuss behavior should be held within a week of the Discipline Committee meeting. Enter projected dates in this column. Identify persons responsible for sharing data trends for previous reporting period with the faculty.Name and title: Martha Tipton, Principal
Team may wish to lead faculty in brainstorming intervention strategies based on data. Share successes and areas of continued efforts.
1212
School Rules
School Rules• Be Present• Be Prompt• Be Prepared• Be Positive• Be Proud
Classroom Rules• Be Respectful• Be Responsible• Be Cooperative• Follow Directions• Keep Hands and Feet to Self
13
BEHAVIORAL EXPECTATION MATRIX
LOCATION CARING RESPECTFUL SAFE
Classroom •Keep the classroom neat and clean•Help a friend complete a task
•Listen quietly while others are speaking•Take care of classroom materials
•Follow classroom and school-wide procedures•Tell an adult about a problem
Dining Room •Speak with a quiet voice•Clean up your area before leaving•Help a friend who spills something
•Follow the directions of the monitors•Practice good table manners•Always say “please” and “thank you”
•Food items are not to be thrown•Quickly pick spilled food items•Keep hands and feet to yourself both in line and at your table
Hallway •Look at displays only•Be very quiet•Put trash in the trash can
•Walk to the right•Give the person in front of you walking space•Follow the directions of your teacher
•Stay with your teacher•Watch your step and stay in line•Walk ONLY
Restroom •Clean up behind yourself•Let a teacher know if a student is ill
•Always give others privacy•Pick up paper and trash•Wait your turn•Remember to flush
•Only use toilet paper and water for personal use•Report any misconduct to your teacher
1414
How We Teach the Rules and Procedures
• During the first week of school, each teacher discusses and explains the classroom and school rules and procedures with their students.
• Teachers will model expected behaviors and conduct exercises that reinforce school rules.
• Incentives will be in place for students displaying positive behavior.
• Rules and procedures will be posted.
• Parents will be provided a copy of the student/parent handbook.
• All procedures will be discussed and explained to parents during parent conferences and or meetings.
1515
Teaching Behavioral Expectations
• School-wide rules are developed and reviewed yearly by the School Discipline Committee. These rules are displayed and explained to students and staff at the beginning of the year.
• Each classroom and support teacher establishes rules. The rules, classroom management techniques, and consequences are communicated and reviewed periodically so that the students are knowledgeable of them. Copies are sent to parents for understanding and reinforcement at home.
• During Open House and other parent/teacher opportunities, teachers reiterate the importance of the school and class rules. Parents have the opportunity to ask questions and discuss any rules/procedures that they have concerns about.
1616
School ProceduresProcedures for Entering School:• Doors open at 7:00 a.m. for breakfast and close at 7:20 a.m.• All students on campus at 7:00 a.m. must enter the dining room and remain there
until 7:20 a.m.• Students arriving after 7:20 a.m. must enter the building through the front entrance.
Procedures for Dismissal: • Students are escorted out their designated exits by their classroom teachers. All
teachers have designated areas to monitor ensuring that students leave campus promptly.
Lunchroom Procedures:• Students are escorted to the lunchroom at their designated lunch time. Students are
expected to follow all posted rules. A time-out area is provided for students who fail to comply. Wednesdays and Fridays are Silent Days.
Assemblies:• Students are escorted to the multipurpose room by their teachers and are seated in
assigned grade level sections. All students must exhibit good behavior during assemblies, or they may be excluded from attending.
1717
Classroom Procedures• Individual classroom schedules will be posted outside the classroom door. A duplicate
copy of the schedule will be available in the office for reference. Time must be accountable within each classroom.
• Immediately upon entering the classroom, the teacher will have independent student activities available for class.
• Every student must carry a hall pass when outside the classroom
• All students will raise their hand and wait to be recognized. This procedure will be used in the classroom, during assemblies, and in the dining room.
• Teachers/Adults will raise their hands and students will follow suit in order to attain silence.
• Cooperative learning groups will be implemented within each classroom.
• Classrooms will be organized in a manner that accommodates large and small group instruction as well as literacy centers.
• Each classroom teacher will have a procedure for collecting and accounting for daily class work and homework assignments.
1818
School Wide Incentives
• Students are awarded certificates/ribbons for good citizenship and excellent conduct during Honor’s Programs each six weeks report card period.
• Any faculty/staff may recognize a student caught “doing the right thing” and announce his/her name via intercom during morning announcements. Students may also receive a special pencil from the Principal when they are caught “doing the right thing”.
• Adopters also provide a Grill Thrill for students who have E or S in conduct during the first six weeks of school.
1919
Teacher IncentivesProcedures for recognizing and encouraging positive teacher
interaction:
• Behavior and attendance charts are posted outside each classroom. (see sample chart on following page, 20)
• If there are no behavior infractions by the end of the day, the class gets a green mark on the chart.
• If there are behavior infractions the class gets a red mark for the day.
• The teacher records the daily attendance. (Target goal is 99-100 percent)
• If the class has all green/ marks for the entire week, and 99-100% attendance for the week, they may be out of uniform the following Friday.
2020
BEHAVIOR AND ATTENDANCE CHART Month__________________ Year_________
Teacher__________________ Grade/Section
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
2121
Resources for Incentives
• Adopters
• Community agencies & businesses
• Restaurants
• Fundraisers
• Churches
• Parent organizations
2222
General Procedure for Dealing with Problem Behaviors
Observe problem behavior
Problem solve
Determineconsequence
Follow proceduredocumented
File necessarydocumentation
Send referral to
office
File necessary documentation
Determine consequence
Followthrough withconsequences
Problem solve
Follow documented
procedure
Write referral &Escort student to office
Follow upwith student
within aweek
Is behavior major?
Does student have 3?
NO YES
NO YES
Find a place to talk with student(s) Ensure safety
2323
Character Education
• Character Education is taught by the school counselor during classroom sessions and during quiet days in the cafeteria by the principal
• Each week a character trait is introduced during morning announcements
• MCS Family Life Education and Health and Wellness Curricula is taught in Physical Education and regular classrooms
2424
ATOD Prevention
• Mendez Too Good for Drugs• Just Say No to Drugs Annual Parade• Red Ribbon Week Activities• Family Life Curriculum• McGruff’s “Crack Down On Drugs Presentation”• D.A.R.E. (Drugs Abuse Resistance Education)
2525
Sexual Harassment
• Annual Sexual Harassment training was done with faculty on August 3, 2009.
• Bullying Policy # 6.304 was reviewed with faculty on September 24, 2009.
2626
Bullying Prevention
• Training with faculty regarding prevention including defining bullying/intimidation, recognizing early stages, providing strategies for addressing was done on August 3, 2009. (Board Policy #6.304)
• Training of students on this policy will be implemented by the school counselor during individual classroom visits and on individual basis as needed throughout the school year.
2727
School Safety Plan• Please indicate the date your plan was
submitted: September 30, 2009
• Dates for drills: Monthly
• Dates for training: Each Semester
• Dates for plan review: Each Semester
2828
Monitoring Process
• School, classroom and individual discipline data is analyzed bi-weekly by teachers and the school discipline committee.
• Adjustments are made to the school-wide discipline plan as needed.
• Mentors are provided for new teachers.
• The S-team process is used to develop/modify intervention plans for students with at-risk behaviors.
2929
Action StepsEBS Benchmark Indicator Date to
Monitor Improvement
Ongoing Action
School-wide #1 3-5 Positively stated school-wide rules posted
Every Six Weeks
Morning Announcements; Video skits, Opportunities for frequent repetition for students and staff
Non Classroom #2 School-wide expected student behaviors will be taught in non classroom settings
Daily Discipline committee will brainstorm with faculty and staff to develop and formalize lesson plans for Cafeteria
Classroom #2 Problem behaviors are defined clearly
Each Twenty Day Attendance Period
Discipline Committee will monitor office referrals every twenty day attendance period
Individual #1 Assessments are conducted regularly to identify students with chronic behavior problems
Each Twenty Day Attendance Period
Discipline committee will review office referrals and determine which students to refer to the S-Team
3030
Prevention ProgramsProgram Person
ResponsibleAudience Timeline
Character Education School Counselor
Principal
Classroom Teachers
Para Professionals
Grades
Pre-K through 5
School Year 2009-2010
Daily
Just Say No School Counselor
Classroom Teachers
Community Agencies
Grades
Pre-K through 5
October, 2009
Red Ribbon Week
Mendez Too Good for Drugs Classroom Teachers
Grades 1 through 5 October, 2009
Red Ribbon Week
School Nurse Presentations School Nurse Grades 4 and 5 School Year 2009-2010
Second Semester
3131
Intervention Plan
• Parent/ Teacher Conferences• Behavior Plan/Contracts• Loss of Privileges/Incentives• Targeted Incentive Programs for Specific
Students• Individual/Group Counseling• In-School Suspension (ISS)• Out-of-School Suspensions
3232
In-School Suspension Plan• The principal will decide whether the behavior infraction warrants ISS and the number
of days• Parents will be notified through written and telephone communication
when a student is assigned to ISS• The ISS Assistant will also be given a copy of the ISS notice.• Students will eat lunch and take restroom breaks separately from the rest of the
student body• The ISS Assistant will remain with the student at all times• Students will be excluded from support classes• The classroom teacher will provide assignments, materials and supplies• Intermediate students will write a “plan of action” that will be reviewed by the teacher,
counselor, and principal for approval• Primary students will draw a picture as a ”plan of action” that will be reviewed by the
teacher, counselor, and principal for approval• The ISS Assistant will keep a notebook of Students assigned to ISS including the
infraction, arrival and departure dates and times
3333
Secondary Intervention Evaluation
• To evaluate the effectiveness of our plan the discipline team will monitor disciplinary referrals every twenty days. The team will look for trends and establish new proactive measures when necessary. The discipline team will determine if interventions are working and make adjustments as needed.
3434
Tertiary Interventions
• The School Support Team will identify and plan for students who require additional support through the use of referral data. When students are referred to the office for the third time the Support Team Process will begin.
• Functional Behavior Assessments and/or comprehensive Behavior Intervention Plans will be developed for these students.
• The success of the interventions will be monitored by the frequency of the behavioral referrals.
3535
ResultsFrequency
Table
Fighting
Min Inj
Non Gang
Insolent/
Insubord-Refusal
Disruptive Behavior
W/prior unsucess/intv
Misc/Level 1
Run/Hall/Throw
Misc/ Level 2
Shoving/Ball/
No Injury
Threats
Bullying Intimidation
2007-2008 26 17 9 61 44 5
2008-2009 33 15 7 46 36 3
2007-2008 More referrals were made for and misconduct and fighting than any other
behavior infractions.
2008-2009 Again, more referrals were made for misconduct and fighting
however, the number of decreased in misconduct infractions and increased in fighting
3636
Green zone 0 – 1, yellow zone 2 – 5, red zone 6+ office referrals
Primary Prevention:School-/Classroom-Wide Systems for
All Students,Staff, & Settings
Secondary Prevention:
Specialized GroupSystems for Students with At-Risk Behavior
Tertiary Prevention:Specialized
IndividualizedSystems for Students
with High-Risk Behavior
91% of Students
2%
CONTINUUM OFSCHOOL-WIDE
INSTRUCTIONAL & POSITIVE BEHAVIOR
SUPPORT
7%
3737
Computation for Triangle
1. 6+ office referrals (red zone)= 9 Divide by number in student body for % in red zone 2. 2 – 5 office referrals (yellow zone)= 34
Divide by number in student body for % in yellow zone3. 1 office referral= 43 4. 0 – 1 office referral (green zone)= 422(add #3 and #4) Divide by number in student body for % in green zone 4. Total students referred (total of first 3 lines)= 73 5. Divide by number in student body for % students
referred of student body was referred6. Total Student Body=465
3838
Celebration
• Caught Doing the Right Thing Recognition
• Six Weeks Good Behavior Movies
• Six Weeks Honors Programs
• Perfect Attendance Parties/Burger King
• Faculty Recognition/Perfect Attendance
• End-of Year Awards (Bicycles)
• Faculty and Staff Luncheon
3939
Conclusion
The School-wide Behavior Plan is an ongoing process. It was developed to create a conducive learning environment by a select group of individuals and ratified by the entire faculty, staff and school administration at Bruce Elementary. All stakeholders will share the responsibility of providing a safe and nurturing learning environment that promotes academic achievement and empowers students to become caring, responsible and successful.
4040
Plan for Support & Monitoring
• By the end of September submit Discipline Plan to District Coach and Academic Superintendent for your region. Includes:– Team Members and Team Leader– Meeting Schedule for year– TIC (also submitted to Coach Oct., Jan., Apr.)– Action Plan (based on EBS results)Ongoing training for Team Leaders and others
will be provided throughout the school year
4141
District PBIS Coaches
• Northeast Region, Academic Supt. Kevin McCarthy– Charlotte Baucom, [email protected]
• Southeast Region, Academic Supt. Dr. Terrence Brown– Ashley Faulk, [email protected]
• Northwest Region, Academic Supt. Catherine Battle– Brady Henderson, [email protected]
• Southwest Region, Academic Supt. William Rhodes – Ann Sharp, [email protected]
• Striving Schools, Academic Supt. Dr. Roderick Richmond– Carolyn Matthews, [email protected]
Center for Safe & Drug Free Schools416-4240 fax: 416-4221