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Restorative Justice – Discipline to Thrive

It is well known that disruptive student behaviour negatively influences school climate and learning. For students to thrive socially and academically, it is critical that an orderly and safe classroom environment be created, a healthy respect for authority nurtured and student self-discipline developed.

Traditional school discipline with its exclusionary and adversarial practices is ineffective at achieving these goals because suspension and punishment break relationship just when the child needs supportive relationship the most.  There is significant evidence that such practices, moreover, are ineffective at helping children develop new behaviours.  In fact, children who are disciplined using exclusion or punishment show reduced motivation to maintain self-control, an increase in anger and weakened academic performance.  Punishment and suspension also add to the risk trajectory of children who have experienced stress or trauma.  It is no wonder, then, that highly punitive schools tend to have higher rates of violence, truancy, and aggression.  

There is a better way…  At Skye Collage we are implementing phase 1 of a child-centered approach to discipline we call the “Thrive Discipline Framework”.  The framework uses five key principles to nurture the respect for authority, self-discipline and cooperation students need to thrive at school and beyond.

Proactive community building.  

At Skye College we invest in proactively nurturing a safe, supportive, collaborative and caring culture.  We achieve this, amongst other things, through frequent student and staff circles.  Circles provide a platform where everyone belongs as equal members of the learning community.  Circles are a forum to safely discuss issues that concern the social life of the class and to learn and practice new social and emotional skills. 

Relational and self-management skills.

At Skye College our Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) curriculum will develop the critical skills students need to remain in right relationship with others and stay connected to their inner selves.  These include self-regulation, mindfulness, listening without preconceived judgement and clearly expressing one’s own feelings and needs.  Our SEL curriculum draws from several evidence-based approaches with a proven track record for improving social and emotional intelligence.

Clear expectations
At Skye College we make sure expected behaviour is clearly defined, frequently and explicitly taught, and consistently reinforced throughout the school.  Our “thrive behaviours” are clearly linked to the school’s vision (an education to thrive), so that students understand their purpose; not to control, but to equip.  Students therefore not only know exactly what is expected, but also understand why these expectations are important. 

A consistent restorative response to inappropriate behaviour. 
By investing in proactive and preventative initiatives, unwanted behaviour can be dramatically reduced.  When it does occur, however, it is critical to respond in a way that is consistent and restorative

Consistency. 
The Thrive Discipline flow chart brings consistency to teachers’ responses to unwanted behaviours.  The flowchart not only guides teachers to use the least invasive intervention possible but also provides a way to elevate unwanted behaviours constructively and collaboratively when needed.

 

A restorative response. 
When teachers respond to unwanted behaviour with a restorative mind-frame, the focus is not “what rule was broken and what punishment should be meted out…”  Instead, teachers focus on understanding how the unwanted behaviour harmed people and relationships; how thing could be made as right as possible; and how connection could be restored.  This is better – for both students and teachers.  After all, when teachers feel that they must control students through fear of punishment, they experience high levels of stress in a confrontational classroom culture.  In contrast, when teachers are supported to create cooperative communities through the development and maintenance of right relationships, stress decreases and culture becomes more positive and cooperative. 

Restorative Discipline has shown that, in most cases, students will choose more respectful options when they come to understand, through dialogue, how their behaviour has impacted others.  In other words, restorative approaches to discipline help students learn from their behaviour while strengthening connections to self and others.  This makes it much less likely that students will repeat unwanted behaviours. 

In summary, the Thrive Discipline Framework will create a safe, supportive, caring and collaborative culture through proactively building a positive school community, developing the skills students need for effective self-management and relationship, clarifying expectations and explicitly teaching thrive-behaviours.  When unwanted behaviour does occur, the framework will guide teachers to respond in consistent and restorative ways that strengthen relationship and provide the learning experiences students need to thrive. 

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What Sets Us Apart

Skye College: Lofty ambitions achieved through practical tools.

Thrive in life

At Skye College we are vision-driven, and our vision is unashamedly radical.  We aim to equip every student to thrive – not just in school, but in life.  Not just now – but in the future.  From the research, people who thrive have four things in common.  Firstly, they are deeply connected to others and are able to continually build and sustain those deep connections.  Secondly, they are equipped to reach their full potential in order to, thirdly, contribute to their world in ways they find personally meaningful.  Finally, people who thrive have healthy and productive habits that lay down the rails for a successful and resilient life.  

Research driven

At Skye College, supported by Skye Education, we have invested years in research and development.  We are equipped with a solid understanding of what works in schools, and what it takes to equip students to thrive in life.  We exclusively use approaches with a proven track record for maximizing success.  

For example:

·       We understand the skills students will need to thrive in the 21st century, and we know how to teach in the most effective way to ensure our students (all of them), not only gain these skills but maximize their own potential and develop unique talents.

·       We understand how learning works.  We know that people can make rapid progress when we align our teaching to the way the brain is wired.  We design our classrooms and Professional Development programmes accordingly – so that students and teachers can get better faster. 

·       We know that socio-emotional and academic development go hand in hand – each building the other.  We understand how to create great school cultures of psychological safety, positive social-norms, consistent adults, supportive connections, and discipline processes that restore, rather than strain, relationships.

·       We understand what sets successful teacher teams apart…  One component is the team’s beliefs about their efficacy – their perception of their shared ability to be successful.  This sense of shared efficacy is, in fact, one of the greatest predictors of student achievement discovered to date.  Luckily, we know just how to build such teams.    

The missing links that leads to implementation

The knowledge on what works is available (if complex) and yet schools have, in many cases, not benefitted fully from what we know about what works.  We believe that the “missing link” is a practical process to translates the “big ideas” of what works into granular components and behaviours than can be easily trained, practiced, implemented and monitored by busy staff of bustling schools.

At Skye College, we support our teachers to do just this by going granular.

 

We go granular by translating research-based best practice into granular techniques and practical tools.  Here is just one example of the process we follow with the various, complex and interconnected components that make for thriving schools.

Going granular – an example

We know that teacher and student expectations are a major driver of student achievement.  In short, students tend to live up to these expectations – whether high or low.  We understand this dynamic, and we know how to elevate expectations by equipping teachers with granular techniques and micro-behaviours that can be easily taught, practiced, monitored and perfected – demystifying this vital component of great teaching.  These tools include:

·       Asking interesting, rigorous, and open-ended questions (technique 4 – “art of the question”).

·       Asking all students to answer questions, whether or not they’ve raised their hand (technique 14  “cold-calling”).

·       Creating a safe classroom, where mistakes are welcomed, peers are supportive and students can take the intellectual risks necessary for growth (technique 42 – “culture of error”)

·       Planning an “exemplar” answer to a question.  Knowing what a good answer looks like will help a teacher to “stretch” student thinking and not settle for the first best, semi-correct answer.  (technique 7 – “exemplar planning”).

·       Rewarding right answers with harder work…  In other words, teachers should make it a habit to ask more of students and stretch their thinking even further (technique 22 “stretch it”).

·       Creating joyful classrooms where student motivation and engagement are maximized (technique 61 – “the joy factor”).

These are only a few of many techniques that build great expectations.  And great expectations are just one small part of the amazing classrooms that are within reach of every school who implements what works.

At Skye College we’ve taken our vision – an education to thrive – apart.  We know how it works.  We understand the intricate parts and how they fit together.  We’re ready to give our teachers the tools they need to put it back together and bring it to life, for all.  

To find out more and visit Skye College, book a tour now with the Skye College Principal. Click the button below.

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Bringing the calm of a Montessori education home.

Mom and dad, we invite you to pause.  There, where you are, in the thick of parenting and life.  Pause, for a moment, to consider the miracle of your child’s developing brain.

Your child’s brain is deeply extraordinary.  Your baby was born with approximately 100 billion neurons.  As an adult, you only have about half that many. 

Your child’s brain is a learning powerhouse.  It more than doubled its volume in the first three months and connections are forming now at a rate that will remain unrivalled in later life.  Even more incredible – this is not a passive process.  Children are actively involved in their own brain development.  They seek out the social and sensorial experiences that build healthy brains.

Maria Montessori’s work was guided by this insight, which reframes everything we do in parenting and education.  Your child is profoundly capable!  Your child is building their own brain!  Your job is to shape the environment so that it supports this natural development; to facilitate the sensorial and social experiences your child needs to thrive.  Your job is simply to create a safe space for your child’s developing brain at home.  Here are some thoughts on getting started.

Nurture and touch

“Of all things, love is the most potent.” – Maria Montessori.

Nurturing touch at school and at home is vital.  The research here is unambiguous.  Children who experience loving physical touch show improved and lasting cognitive development.  Children who experience above-average affection from their mothers are less likely to be hostile, anxious, or emotionally distressed as adults.  Receiving minimal touch as a child, on the other hand, is associated with long-lasting cognitive delays and aggression.  

Yes spaces

“The hands are the instruments of man’s intelligence.” – Maria Montessori.

Your child touches things because they are driven by the deep and important need for sensorial experience.  Your child is not just messing around… they are engaging in the important work of building their brain.  To support your child, create yes-spaces around your home.  Yes-spaces are areas your child can freely explore without fear of breaking anything, getting into trouble, or hurting themselves. 

Remember to view your home from your child’s perspective.  You might be surprised at what you notice when you get down to see things as they do… One mom we know discovered a mysterious space (cave) under a cabinet where her son (pirate) had stashed all her teaspoons (treasure).    

Productive struggle

“Never help a child with a task at which he feels he can succeed.” – Maria Montessori.

The comedian Michael McIntyre has his audience in fits when he proclaims, talking to expectant couples, that they have no idea how difficult things will become when they have kids.  “Things you don’t even consider to be things will become nearly impossible… like leaving the house.”  We’ve all been there.  We often respond by doing things for our kids and, of course, that is often appropriate.  It is important to remember, however, that your child builds their brain through productive struggle.  When you can, design some time into your schedule to allow your child to do things for themselves – even to help you out.  Their confidence and independence will soar.

Follow your child

“Follow the child, but follow the child as her leader.” – Maria Montessori.

You don’t share your child’s passion for dinosaurs / dead bugs / the dog’s tail.  We get it…  Following the child is simply about respect.  Remember that, in all these things, your child is building their future self.  Your child is unfolding their unique personality.  Allow yourself to know them and be fascinated.  Here are four simple things you can do tomorrow…

  • Observe.  Following the child requires, firstly, that we learn to observe without distraction.  Take a few minutes to simply watch your child at work and play – we guarantee that you will notice something new. 
  • Create a rich environment.  Provide opportunities to discover interests through books, experiences, and time in nature. 
  • Slow down.  Do not overschedule!  Your child does not need to be a soccer superstar AND chess whizz AND master chef AND programmer by the age of eight.  Allow your child the precious time and space to simply be. 
  • Respect.  Always respect your child’s choices and interests and, if you can, share in their joy.  Let them show you the wide and wonderful world (of sometimes icky things) they are discovering for the first time.    

Child-friendly order

“Order is one of the needs of life which, when it is satisfied, provides real happiness.” – Maria Montessori.

Order, for a child, is about more than mere tidiness.  Your child’s job is to make sense of the world.  To discover its properties, patterns and relationships.  Your child’s job is to find out where they belong.  This path of learning and development is more like that of a butterfly than that of a bullet.

When ordering spaces, remember your goals.  Ultimately, you want your child to develop competence and independence and to grow as an individual.  This means that your child’s things should be stored and displayed in ways that are inviting, encourages independence use and reflect their current development and interests.  The easiest way to achieve this is to limit the number of things your child can access at one time by rotating objects.  Providing simple categories your child can restore themselves is a good start.  Think “vehicles”, “people” and “animals” for toys.  Refrain from insisting that Silvanian Families are not “people”, but “animal-people”… you can work your way up to that.    

Let go of perfection.  Focus on kindness

“Children are human beings to whom respect is due, superior to us by reason of their innocence and of the greater possibilities of their future… Let us treat them with all the kindness which we would wish to help to develop in them.” – Maria Montessori.

Have you ever considered the paradoxical truth that the “perfect parent” would be unable to truly prepare kids for life?  Life is messy and your kid is not perfect.  Luckily, being imperfect yourself, you are the perfect person to teach them how to be imperfect – gracefully!  Think about it this way…  if you never made any mistakes your child would never see resilience in the face of failure.  If you were always right, strong and in control your child would never see you model humility or be okay with weakness.  If you never had to accept help and grace from your child, your child would not experience the joy of such a kindness. 

Mom and dad, we invite you to give yourself a break.  Be human.  Do your best and, when you fail, apologise.  There are few lessons more valuable you could teach your child!