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Creating and Sustaining a Positive School Climate. by Tom, Karen, Carol, Greg and Tony 3.18.10. What is School Climate?. School environments vary greatly. Whereas some schools feel friendly, inviting, and supportive, others feel exclusionary, unwelcoming, and even unsafe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Creating and Sustaining a Positive School Climate
by Tom, Karen, Carol, Greg and Tony
3.18.10
What is School Climate?
• School environments vary greatly. Whereas some schools feel friendly, inviting, and supportive, others feel exclusionary, unwelcoming, and even unsafe
• The feelings and attitudes that are elicited by a school’s environment are referred to as school climate.
What is School Climate?
• Research suggests that school climate directly affects the academic, emotional, and mental states of its students.
• The situation places an extremely large amount of
power and responsibility over the lives of thousands of children in the hands of a few administrators.
Aspects of the academic environment• extra curricular opportunities (outside the
classroom)o increase sociability, improve ties b/t studentso social bonding leads to self-control
• parent involvemento more involved the parent, more involved the
student• educators
o position to influence the futureo faculty communication is key
• physical aspect of the facilityo class size, smaller = higher achievemento smaller schools, under 100 students per grade
• aestheticso attractive in color, pleasant furniture, student
work
How do you assess your school's climate?
• climate is formed by individual attitudes, behaviors, and group norms
• climate of a school is not necessarily experienced in the same way by all of its members- variability in individual perceptions of a school’s climate
• individual characteristics may impact these perceptions
How do you assess your school's climate?
• Instruments for examining perceptions of school climate: the Elementary and Middle School Climate Survey, the Quality of School Life Scale, and the Elementary School Environment Scale
• Findings provide a glimpse into how students feel about the school’s climate and allow school personnel to take the initial steps to improving their quality.
How Do You Change Your School Climate?
• Know Your School Climate • Leaders Model Positive Attitude and Set
Expectations• Build Positive School Climate at
the Teacher Level• Build Positive School Climate at the Student
Level• Involve Parents and Community in Building a
Positive School Climate
Developing a Positive School Climate at the Staff Level
Adult happiness and productivity = Student happiness and productivity So the question is: How do principals/leaders keep adults happy and productive?
Developing a Positive School Climate at the Staff Level
1. Support New Teachers2. Clue Into Climate3. Empower Teachers4. Recognition and Reward5. Don't Ignore Adminstrator Morale6. Deal With Student Discipline7. Treat Teachers as Professionals8. Ask Teachers What Is Going On9. Keep Facilities Tidy10. Develop An Emotional IQ
Developing a Positive School Climate at the Staff Level
Practical Ideas To Use With Your Faculty:
PHILOSOPHY
Be Present Make Their Day
Choose Your AttitudePlay
Research has shown that schools implementing
supportive and positive school climate strategies are more successful in creating environments conducive to learning.
Developing a Positive School Climate at the Student Level
The important thing is not so much that every child should be taught, as that every child should be given the wish to learn. -- John Lubbock
Self esteem Pop Quiz
A. Increasing a student's self-esteem will result in increased achievement
B. Increasing a student's achievement will result in increased self-esteem
T
The research showed increased
self-esteem does not result in increased
achievement.
For example, the Washington Post in 2006 noted: “6% of Korean eighth-graders surveyed expressed confidence in their math skills compared with 39% of US eighth-graders. But a respected international math assessment showed Koreans scoring far ahead of their peers in the United Stated, raising questions about the importance of self esteem.”
To create a positive climate for learning, students must
experience… • Mutual respect in the classroom
• A strong academic curriculum
• A strong behavioral curriculum
• Academic and Behavioral Mentoring
• Opportunities for Collaboration
• Student Leadership in the Classroom
• A Pleasant Physical Environment
• A Strong Sense of Connectedness
Education is not filling a pail but the lighting of a fire. William Butlers Yeats
Ensure that ALL students feel valued and supported by: • Establishing clearly defined schoolwide behavior
expectations rather than rules. ("We are the HAWKS")
• Actively upholding the right of every student to a
safe learning environment. (anti-bullying policies) • Establishing a proactive rather than a reactive
approach to discipline. • Holding class meetings where everyone can speak
openly about concerns and celebrations.
Ensure that ALL students feel valued and supported by: • Having high expectations both academically and
socially (no excuses allowed!) • Acknowledging positive actions. (Talon Tickets)
• Recognizing and building on the strengths and
accomplishments of your school community. (have celebrations!)
• Implementing a restorative justice approach to
handling discipline problems that do occur. This approach seeks to heal the whole child by making things right for the victim, the offending child, and the school community. (restoring and building relationships)
Ensure that ALL students feel valued and supported by: • Creating opportunities for students to share their
talents (talent shows, show cases, peer tutoring) • Knowing every child by name (hallway greetings,
building buddies, save-one-student) • Implementing character education (guidance
lessons, student recognition) • Providing an atmosphere of respectful and
positive interactions. • Providing opportunities for service projects
A positive school climate welcomes and encourages parental and community involvement. It is the remaining part of the cycle.
Developing a Positive School Climate at the Parent/Community Level
How Do We Involve Parents?
No cow ever gave milk because a farmer sent her a letter Bland mass mailings and lifeless meeting announcements aren't likely to motivate busy parents and community members. A principal that is serious about this involvement reaches out to stakeholders in personally meaningful ways
Guidelines for Involving Parents
• Develop a plan to promote parent and community involvement
• Foster a climate of hospitality and openness• Focus on the needs of the parents/community• Build a personal knowledge base about
stakeholders• Target specific persons to tasks• Take advantage of casual encounters with
parents/community members
Guidelines for Involving Parents
• Train teachers to use parents and community members effectively
• Respect cultural sensitivities• Avoid using every parental encounter to
discuss their child's progress• Show your commitment to parent
involvement by demonstrating you care• Celebrate the accomplishments of parents
and community
Results of Parental Involvement
• Parents and community members will feel welcome in the schools
• Community attitudes about school are positive
• Build collaborative relationships between stakeholders
• Everyone shares responsibility for the mission• Opportunity for reflection and evaluation• This effort will lead to a positive school
climate that is sustainable
The Impact of Parental Involvement
Building a school community begins with the assumption that parents are
part of the enterprise. Therefore, parents who are most actively involved
with their children, with each other, and with the school become the
problem-solvers and the tacticians in increasing the level of involvement of
the other parents.
Sam Redding
Perceptions are interconnected with school's attempt to involve parents.
"Parents' attitudes about the quality of their child's school are highly correlated
with the school's practices to involve parents. Parents who became involved at home and at school say that the school
has a postive climate. But even more so, parents who believe that the school is
actively working to involve them say the school is a good one"
Darber and Epstein
Summary
"School climate can be a positive influence on the health of the learning environment or a significant
barrier to learning" (Freiberg, 1998)
A postive school climate can start with one person...YOU!!!
References:Christensen, J., Lundin, S. C., & Paul, H. (2000). Fish! A Remarkable Way to Boost Morale and Improve Results (1 ed.). New York: Hyperion.The School Climate Challenge: Narrowing the Gap Between School Climate Research and School Climate Policy, Practice Guidelines and Teacher Education Policy, a paper presented by the Center for Social and Emotional Education (CSEE). Retrieved March 14, 2010, from http://www.schoolclimate.org/climate/documents/school-climate-challenge.pdfCohen, J. (2006). Social, emotional, ethical, and academic education: Creating a climate for learning, participation in democracy, and well-being. Harvard Educational Review, 76(2), 201–237. Hilt,L (2010) Fish Activities, 1-6.Vail, K. (2005). Create Great School Climate. Education Digest, 71(4), 4-11.Vail, K. (2005). Climate Control. American School Board Journal, 192(6), 16-19. Epstein, J.L. (1995, May). School-family-community partnerships: Caring for the children we share. Phi Delta Kappan 76 (9), 701-712. Redding, S. (1991). Creating a school community through parental involvement. Education Digest, 56(3), 6-9. Waler, J. A. (1998). Promoting parent/community involvement in schools. Education Digest, 63(8), 45-47. APA formatting by BibMe.org.