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Black, Steve; Welsh, John J. – American School Board Journal, 1985
At a Florida high school, students who break school rules face predetermined consequences that are ascending in severity. The success of the system is contingent on staff training, communication, recordkeeping, administrative support, and evaluation. (MLF)
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems, High Schools, Parent Teacher Cooperation
DePaul, Samuel A.; Downing, Camille P. – American School Board Journal, 1998
A Pennsylvania countywide, centralized alternative school called CLASS--Creative Learning Alternatives for Student Success--encourages students to stay in school, master the basic skills, and develop the cooperative attitudes needed for success. Eight districts now participate and enrollment has grown to 73 students in grades 7 through 12. (MLF)
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Discipline Policy, High Risk Students, Nontraditional Education
Chizak, Lawrence – American School Board Journal, 1984
Detention rooms are more effective when students are accountable for their behavior, rules and consequences are clear and publicized, and teachers are involved in the disciplinary process. (DCS)
Descriptors: Accountability, Behavior Problems, Behavior Standards, Discipline
Kongshem, Lars – American School Board Journal, 1996
Describes the educational program in a Fairfax County, Virginia, juvenile detention center. The center's approach is a combination of "tough love" philosophy, interagency cooperation between the school district and state agencies, and an educational program based on a one-room school house model. (LMI)
Descriptors: Correctional Education, Delinquent Rehabilitation, Discipline, Discipline Policy
Zakariya, Sally Banks – American School Board Journal, 1987
Discusses chronically delinquent students and methods of dealing with their disruptive behavior, ways to maintain discipline in schools, warning signs characteristic of delinquents, signs of disruption-prone schools, and various programs instigated by state and local school administrations to handle problems from academic failure to criminal…
Descriptors: Career Guidance, Delinquency Causes, Delinquency Prevention, Discipline Policy
Strong, Gerald – American School Board Journal, 1983
The discipline policy at Xenia (Ohio) High School deals unequivocally with student drug and alcohol users. Chemically dependent students are forced to get help. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Alcoholism, Discipline Policy, Drinking
Imber, Michael – American School Board Journal, 2002
Describes how administrator-imposed discipline of students is circumscribed by their legal rights. (PKP)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems, Dress Codes
Harrington-Lueker, Donna – American School Board Journal, 1994
School systems across the country are adding alternative education programs designed for violent or chronically disruptive youth. Some school districts and states are contracting with private groups to provide programs including residential schools. Other programs include the Youth Challenge Corps, authorized by Congress in 1992, and boot-camp…
Descriptors: Delinquent Rehabilitation, Discipline Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Nontraditional Education
Sauer, Roger; Chamberlain, Dennis – American School Board Journal, 1985
Six steps are provided for addressing the problem of student misconduct: (1) developing a well-publicized districtwide program, (2) creating a task force to develop a misconduct management handbook for teachers, (3) soliciting reactions, (4) field testing the draft, (5) revising the handbook, and (6) followup. (TE)
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Behavior Standards, Discipline, Discipline Policy
Sendor, Benjamin – American School Board Journal, 1986
Examines a United States Supreme Court decision upholding the Bethel, Washington, school district in disciplining a student for giving a sexually provocative speech. Refers to the 1969 decision in "Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District," in which students had been suspended for wearing symbols of opposition to the…
Descriptors: Activism, Court Litigation, Discipline Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
Tomczyk, Karen – American School Board Journal, 2000
An urban New Jersey district changed its high-school suspension policy, giving chronically tardy students administrative detention. Suspensions have been halved, and more students are graduating. Other successful programs include peer mediation and an alternative-education/tutoring program for disaffected middle-schoolers. (MLH)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Conflict Resolution, Discipline Policy, Dropout Prevention
Lawrence, Patrick A.; Olvey, S. Kent – American School Board Journal, 1994
A detailed discipline plan must be developed with the consensus of the school community. To be effective, the plan should have the following characteristics: (1) be understood by everyone; (2) be consistent in imposing sanctions; (3) specify good and bad behavior; (4) include instructions for emergencies and alternatives to out-of-school…
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Emergency Programs, In School Suspension