Title: Safe and Caring Schools Instructional Strategies
1Safe and Caring Schools Instructional Strategies
2Special Education Conference, 2007Agenda
- What is a Safe and Caring School?
- What is SACSC Programming?
- Youth Action
- Restorative Justice and Classroom Conferencing
- Community Partnerships
3Attributes of a Safe and Caring School
- Based on extensive research and province-wide
consultation - Focus on building an effective learning
environment for ALL students
4What is a Safe and Caring School?
- A place where all children/youth and adults feel
like they belong - All students fulfill their academic potential
- A strong sense of self worth
- Personal responsibility and accountability
5Attributes of a Safe and Caring School
- Outlined in the What is a Safe and Caring
School brochure - Covers
- General Nature of the School Community
- Behaviours
- School Citizenship
- Activities and Programs
- Rules and Expectations
6- Based on 10 years of Research,
- the SACSC comprehensive
- approach to character education,
- bullying and violence prevention
- programming has won
- international, national and
- provincial awards and has been
- recognized as a Best Practice.
7What is SACSC Programming?
- Whole-school culture building activities
- Curriculum resources
- Professional development
- for teachers, support staff and administrators
- Community programming
- for parents, coaches, extra-curricular leaders or
other interested adults who works with youth - Special programming/projects
- Youth Action, Restorative Justice/Classroom
Conferencing
8Five Key Topics Based on Attributes
- Integrated into all SACSC programming
- 1. Living Respectfully
- 2. Developing Self-Esteem and Self-Respect
- 3. Respecting Diversity and Preventing Prejudice
- 4. Managing Anger and Dealing with Bullying and
Harassment - 5. Resolving Conflict and Working Together
9Special Programs
- SACSC Youth Action program
- SACSC Restorative Justice
- Global Education and the UNESCO Associated
Schools Project Network program - Ongoing development/pilot of additional programs
as needed
10People like to come to school (now) because they
know it is safe. (Elementary student, Wabasca
focus group, 2004)
11Consider
- Students who have good social skills contribute
to a positive learning environment in classrooms - Students with high self-esteem tend to be more
likely to explore their full potential - Students who are fearful for their safety often
do not want to attend school
12Consider
- Disrespectful behaviour, often causes students to
view their classrooms as unsafe or unfriendly - Emotional distress creates deficits in students
intellectual abilities - An environment in which intimidation and bullying
are allowed to occur impedes students abilities
to learn
13Youth Action and Peer Leadership/Mentorship
The Expecting Respect student group has grown
by leaps and bounds. They are meeting twice a
week on their own time and have really improved
their leadership skills. (Teacher, Wabasca,
2005)
14Youth Action
- Youth Action provides an opportunity for students
to take and active role in addressing issues in
their school/community - Students conduct research among their peers and
then develop, undertake and evaluate projects
that address the issues they uncover
15Youth Action
- Youth Action can be easily adapted for different
student capacities and skill levels, and can be
an effective strategy for engaging special needs
students in the school community - Themes could include a variety of topics from
recycling and respect for school property, to
global issues, bullying, or drug use
16Steps Involved in the Youth Action Projects
- Selecting a focus
- Collecting data
- Analyzing and interpreting the data
- Taking action
17Youth Action Examples
- Global Issues
- Participants identify
- What the students in their school know about the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) - (eradicate extreme poverty and hunger, reduce
child mortality, promote universal primary
education, gender equality, etc) - Actions already taken related to the MDGs
18Youth Action Examples
- 2) Safe and Caring Focus
- Participants identify
- Which Safe and Caring topics should be addressed
- Living Respectfully, Developing Self Esteem,
Respecting Diversity and Preventing Prejudice,
Managing Anger and Dealing with Bullying and
Harassment, Resolving Conflicts Peacefully - Actions already taken related to the SACSC topics
19Youth Action Process
- Students and their supervising teachers attend
SACSC Youth Action Training Workshop - information on data collection and conducting
focus groups - Students collect data from their peers then
analyze the data, identify themes and key issues
and report their findings
20Youth Action Process
- Students attend a second SACSC Youth Action
Training Workshop - to develop an action plan that addresses
identified themes and implement and evaluate
their plan - Students undertake their project(s)
- Students report their findings and experiences
21For more information on Youth Action
- And related resources, please visit the following
- webpage
- http//www.sacsc.ca/Youth_Action.htm
- To participate, please contact the Director of
Educational Programming, Karen Hobbs(780)
447-9484, khobbs_at_sacsc.ca
22Restorative Justice and Classroom Conferencing
I like Safe and Caring Schools because there are
no bullies around. (Elementary student, Wabasca
focus group, 2004)
23What is Restorative Justice?
- An approach to justice/discipline emphasising
respect, addressing human needs, honesty and
reparation - Respectaccorded equally to all participants
- Inclusivenessfull participation and consensus of
those affected - Accountabilitythe offender takes responsibility
for the behaviour - Reparationthe parties decide what restitution or
other measures are appropriate - Restorationrestore the harmed, the offender and
the community
24Classroom Meetings
- Teacher and students collaboratively set rules
and address incidents before they become major
problems - Democratic, respectful, problem-solving
- Focus on logical/restorative consequences
- Develop self/social-esteem, self-confidence
- Foster responsible behaviour by building personal
ownership over rules
25What is Classroom Conferencing?
- A key restorative justice strategy
- Involves a face-to-face meeting between the
person creating harm the harmed, supports and the
teacher - Participants discuss the issue, the affects,
feelings and decide how it can be repaired - The person responsible for the harm completes
reparation
26Key Benefits
- The harmed have a voice and an opportunity for
repair/healing - The consequences become more meaningful for the
person responsiblehe/she learns a better way to
behave - Through reparation the person responsible has an
opportunity to reintegrate into the classroom
community - The class build personal ownership of the rules
27Restorative Consequences
- There is not always time to meet and address
every incident. - Consistent restorative consequences remind
students to consider how their behaviours affect
others and that they are responsible for
repairing harm - Restorative consequences must be logical, healing
and - Related to the offence
- Reasonable
- Respectful
- Responsible
28Resources
- Class Meetings for Safe and Caring Schools
- Outlines sample meetings, process and topics
- Coming soon Restorative Justice in the School
- Outlines how to use restorative justice in the
school and classroom - Unit and Lesson Plans
- The Society has a variety of lesson plans for
elementary and secondary classes - Visit www.sacsc.ca/Restorative_Justice.htm
29Community Partnerships
30SACSC Community Programming
- To help all adults to model and reinforce safe
and caring behaviour - To affect children and youths attitudes and
behaviours both in and out of school, a program
consistent with the school program must be
available to parents and other people in the
community - Consists of a series of dynamic workshops
31SACSC Community Programming
- Workshops follow the school topics and are
designed to help all adults who work with
children - parents, guardians
- coaches, youth group leaders
- youth workers, social workers
- school support staff
- community agency staff and
- other interested community members working with
youth
32Community Partnerships
- Communities often choose to work together,
engaging individuals and community service groups
in supporting the school programming - The comprehensive approach utilizes all of the
SACSC programs - Each program compliments the activities of the
others
33Implementing the SACSC Comprehensive Programming
34One Community Partnership Example
- Northland School Division Schools
- Mistassiniy
- Pelican Mountain
- St. Theresa
- Bigstone Cree Nation Education Authority
- Oski Pasikoniwew Kamik school
- The Society for Safe and Caring Schools and
Communities (SACSC)
35Focus
- To Increase/Build
- Parental Involvement
- Student Engagement and Success
- Positive Character
- Respect for Diversity
-
- To Prevent
- bullying and violence, gang involvement, drug
use, early school drop outs
36A Safe and Caring Wabasca
- The project includes a variety of school and
community training and resources - United the schools and community, guided by
project steering committee - school and community representatives, elders,
school boards, parents and other community
members - Provides for capacity building at the school
community level and builds program sustainability
over the long term by ensuring that experts are
available locally.
37Its Always about the people!!!
My heroineour SACSCs coordinator Tracy
Cardinal. She is the glue that bonds the public
and Band schools in the Wabasca Community and
Bigstone Cree Nation.
38Results
- The Evaluation of the three-year pilot project
- concluded that the Wabasca community
- experienced
- Improvement in general behaviour and self concept
of children and youth - Decrease in disciplinary incidents and increased
reporting of bullying in the schools - Overall Improvement of Academic Achievement and
Attendance
39(No Transcript)
40- Research
- SACSC. 2006. Summary of Model for Implementation
Safe and Caring Schools and Communities - Marzano, Robert J. 2003. What Works in Schools
- Spevak, Andrea. 2006. Bullying and Violence
- Olweus, D.1993. Bullying at School What we know
and what we can do about it - Walker, Colvin Ramsey, 1995. Antisocial
Behavior in school Strategies and best practises - Zuker, M.A 2004. A legal prospective on school
violence - Coghlan,R. 2000. The teaching of antiviolence
strategies - Bryk,A.and Schneider B. 2002. Trust in schools A
core resource for improvement - Alberta Education, 2005. Our Words, Our Ways
- Alberta Teachers Association, 2006. Education is
Our Buffalo - Libbey, H. Sept. 2004. Journal of School Health
- Centre for Adolescent Health Australia, Gatehouse
Project - Brendro and Long, 1996. National Crime Prevention
Centre
41Thank You
www.sacsc.ca