1 / 19

2013-2014 SFUSD Restorative Practices

2013-2014 SFUSD Restorative Practices. Student, Family, Community Support Department Pupil Services: 241-3030. Workshop Agenda. Goals and Objectives: Provide an overview of the foundation and strategies of Restorative Practices . Apply RP principles and strategies into teaching practice.

Download Presentation

2013-2014 SFUSD Restorative Practices

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2013-2014 SFUSD Restorative Practices Student, Family, Community Support Department Pupil Services: 241-3030

  2. Workshop Agenda • Goals and Objectives: • Provide an overview of the foundation and strategies of Restorative Practices. • Apply RP principles and strategies into teaching practice. • Staff Community Building • Defining the need for Restorative Practices • RP Definition • Foundation of RP • Principles and Values • Fundamental Hypothesis • RP Paradigm • RP Strategies • Building and Sustaining Trusting Relationships • Responding to Harm • Closing

  3. Restorative Practices: SFUSD Board Approved Resolution Board Resolution: #96-23A1, October 13, 2009 In support of a Comprehensive School Climate, Restorative Justice, and Alternatives to Suspension/Expulsions Aim: 1. To reduce overall numbers of suspensions and expulsions within the district 2. Address the disproportionate numbers of African- American, Latino, and Pacific Islander students who are suspended.

  4. SFUSD Disproportionality 2012-2013 school year African American studentscomprise 10.8% of the student population, yet they made up 54% of the suspensions. • Elementary School: 62% of the suspensions. • Middle School: 52% of suspensions. • High School: 46% of suspensions Latino studentscomprise 23% of student population with a suspension rate of 23%. • Elementary School: 17% of the suspensions. • Middle School: 24% of suspensions. • High School: 28% of suspensions Together, African American and Latino students represent 77% of ALL SFUSD suspensions in the entire school year. (total:1,503 suspensions) We are only beginning to collect out-of-class counseling office referral data at this time.

  5. 2012-2013 Lost Instruction: SFUSD Disproportionality • ELEMENTARY SCHOOL K-5: African Americanstudents, on average, received 5 DAYS LESS INSTRUCTION than their peers. • MIDDLE SCHOOL: African American students received 10 DAYS LESS INSTRUCTION than their peers. • HIGH SCHOOL: African American students receive 19 DAYS LESS INSTRUCTION than their peers.   On average, an SFUSD high school student misses 12 days of instruction each year. That means that, on average, African American students lose 31 daysof instruction each year of high school!

  6. Restorative Practices Definition Restorative Practices are based on principles and processes that emphasize the importance of positive relationships as central to building community and restoring relationships when harm has occurred. Relationship Based Principles Building/ Sustaining Restoring Relationships/ Community Relationships & Community

  7. Relationship Based Principles and Values: The RP Lens • Equity of voice: meaningful participation • High expectations and support = doing things “WITH” not “TO” or “FOR” • Emphasis on building and sustaining trusting relationships • Inclusive decision making • All members of the community are valued • Authentic listening and sharing • Non-punitive response to wrong-doing: High accountability and High responsibility

  8. Restorative Paradigm “What’s fundamental about restorative justice (practices) is a shift away from thinking about laws being broken, who broke the law, and how we punish the people who broke the laws. There’s a shift to: there was harm caused, or there’s disagreement or dispute, there’s conflict, and how do we repair the harm, address the conflict, meet the needs, so that relationships and community can be repaired and restored. It’s a different orientation. It is a shift.” Cheryl Graves- Community Justice for Youth Institute

  9. The underlying premise of Restorative Practices rests with the belief that people will make positive changes when those in positions of authority do things withthem rather than tothem or forthem. Wachtel& Costello (2009), The Restorative Practices Handbook, pg 50

  10. Social Discipline Window Wachtel & Costello (2009), The Restorative Practices Handbook, pg 50

  11. Part 2: Building/SustainingCommunity Relationship Based Principles Building/ Sustaining Restoring Relationships/ Community Relationships &Community

  12. Part 2: Building/Sustaining Community • Inclusive Decision Making: Fair Process • Affective Language • Circles: Community Building/Sustaining • Relationship Building • Check-in / Check-out • Curriculum

  13. Inclusive Decision Making Practices: Fair Process Three core components of Fair Process: • 1 - Engagement:Involving individuals in decisions that affect them by asking for their input and allowing them to refute the merit of one another’s ideas. • 2 - Explanation:Everyone involved and affected understands why final decisions are made as they are. • 3 - ExpectationClarity: Once decisions are made, new expectations are clearly stated so that everyone understands their role and what is expected of them.

  14. Affective language • the starting point for all restorative processes • active non-judgmental listening • authentic expression of feelings and impact in relation to an action (positive or negative) * building strengthened relationships by genuinely presenting oneself as someone who cares and has feelings.

  15. Circle Components • Circle Preparation: • Understanding role of Circle Keeper • Circle set up • Identifying clear purpose of Circle • Thoughtfully selecting circle prompts (considering high and low risk questions) • Selecting talking piece • Circle Keeping: • Introducing the Circle • Reviewing Circle Guidelines • Circle Opening • Circle rounds: Introducing prompts • Closing of Circle

  16. Part 3: Restoring Relationships and Community Relationship Based Principles Building/ Sustaining Restoring Relationships/ Community Relationships & Community

  17. Part 3: Restoring Relationships and Community Restorative Questions: • What happened, and what were you thinking at the time? • What have you thought about since? • Who has been affected by what happened and how? • What about this has been hardest for you? • What do you think needs to happen to make things as right as possible? • Restorative Dialogue using the RP Questions Impromptu Conferencing Restorative Meetings (Classroom and School Wide) • Circles: Responding to harm (Classroom and School Wide) • Alternatives to Suspension/ Re-Integration Formal Restorative Conferencing Re-entry conferences

  18. The Big Picture of RP • Part 1: Restorative Framework for Practice • RP Principles / Values • Fundamental Hypothesis: Doing “WITH” • Understanding Disproportionality / Cultural Humility • Part 2: Building/Sustaining Community • Inclusive Decision Making • Affective Language • Circles: Community Building/Sustaining • Part 3: Restoring Relationships and Community (Restorative Questions) • Impromptu Restorative Conferencing • Restorative Meetings • Circles: Responding to harm Alternatives to Suspension/ Re-Integration • Formal Restorative Conferencing • Re-entry conferences

  19. Thank you! Please visit the SFUSD Restorative Practices Website for more information: http://www.healthiersf.org/RestorativePractices/ • Kerri Berkowitz: Berkowitzk@sfusd.edu 241-3030 Ext 13046

More Related