Saturday, June 06, 2020

Restorative Justice in Schools.





Twice a week, these Texas students circle up and talk about their feelings. It’s lowering suspensions and preventing violence.

These days, more students and teachers report being happy at Spring ISD's Bammel Middle School, 
and the number of three-day out-of-school suspensions 
dropped from 94 last school year to 47.

 
Yasmin Riculfy, a student at Bammel Middle School, listens to her teacher on April 20, 2018.
Yasmin Riculfy, a student at Bammel Middle School, listens to her teacher on April 20, 2018. Pu Ying Huang for The Texas Tribune 

HOUSTON—Two years ago, Bammel Middle School students were often fighting each other in the hallways when the bell rang, and teachers who lost control of their classrooms were regularly handing out three-day suspensions.
These days, more students and teachers report being happy at the Spring ISD school north of Houston, and the number of three-day out-of-school suspensions dropped from 94 last school year to 47.
Principal La'Quesha Grigsby attributes the improvement to a simple schedule change at the beginning of this academic year: a carve-out of 35 minutes twice a week for teachers and students to circle up and talk about their feelings. 

Bammel Middle School is one of a growing number of Texas schools that have adopted "restorative justice," 
which encourages students and teachers to talk through their problems and build stronger relationships in order to prevent conflict and violence before it happens.
"Sometimes those behaviors we see as discipline problems really are because the student is struggling with their academics," 
Grigsby said. 
"We're in a situation where we have to do something drastic ... because what we've been doing is not working."





link to full article here 





BHP