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Peer reviewedHoffman, Scott L. – Journal of Law and Education, 1982
Discusses whether notice and a hearing are required when a student is transferred, for disciplinary reasons, from a New York vocational school to another school. Proposes amending the law to expressly require the same due process protection for disciplinary lateral transfers as is required for student suspensions. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Discipline Policy, Due Process, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedLasley, Thomas J.; Wayson, William W. – Educational Leadership, 1982
Research indicates that good discipline is a melting pot of positive factors including, among other things, high rates of student success and strong principal leadership. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Discipline, Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems
Peer reviewedClarke, Jacqueline; And Others – Child and Youth Services, 1982
Describes types of physical punishment used in schools; reasons given for the punishment; and responses by students, parents, and the community. Says that parents who object to corporal punishment of their children receive better redress from the school board or administration than from the courts. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Board of Education Role, Community Attitudes, Corporal Punishment, Court Role
Zigler, Edward; Anderson, Elaine – UCLA Educator, 1981
Addresses corporal punishment in schools as a policy issue, regarding every manifestation as either abusive or potentially so. Discusses the history of physical punishment in schools, reviews current sentiment toward its use, considers policies in other countries, and examines disciplinary alternatives and child abuse prevention methods.…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Child Advocacy, Corporal Punishment, Discipline Policy
Peer reviewedGoldsmith, Arthur H. – Education and Urban Society, 1982
Well-drafted codes of discipline can help to eliminate the ambiguity and arbitrariness that often have been associated with school discipline. Discipline codes should be characterized by fairness, fact-finding provisions, completeness of information, frankness, flexibility, informality, firmness, concern with disciplinary suitability,…
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Board of Education Role, Court Litigation, Court Role
Peer reviewedToby, Jackson – Public Interest, 1980
Reviews the National Institute of Education's 1978 study of school crime. Offers several social trends as possible causes for recent increases in school crime. Suggests methods for reducing violence in the schools. (BE)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Crime, Differences, Discipline Policy
Bassett, Patrick F. – Independent School, 1979
The director of Woodberry Forest Summer School outlines the implementation and operation of his program as a model for similar endeavors. (SJL)
Descriptors: Administrator Guides, Boarding Schools, Discipline Policy, Educational Economics
Peer reviewedKaeser, Susan C. – Education and Urban Society, 1979
Suspension, although it temporarily alleviates a difficult situation, does little to change behavior or solve the underlying causes of misbehavior. Furthermore, suspension has been found to be used disproportionately against Black students, thus depriving them of access to education. Schools should evaluate their own practices and seek new…
Descriptors: Black Students, Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedSklarz, D. P. – Clearing House, 1979
A junior high principal describes how his teachers participate in the discipline process. They share duty in a small room and act as a behavioral teacher, using a Glasser reality-oriented approach. Mildly disruptive pupils are sent to the behavioral teacher instead of to the assistant principal. (SJL)
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Discipline Policy, Junior High Schools, Nontraditional Education
Peer reviewedGlickman, Carl D.; Wolfgang, Charles H. – Journal of Teacher Education, 1979
A combination of principles drawn from the current major theories of behavior discipline often proves to be more effective than the use of any single theory. (LH)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Problems, Classroom Techniques, Discipline
Peer reviewedFoley, Douglas E. – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1976
In attempts to reduce conflict between Mexicano and Anglo high School students, administrators tended to use legalistic modes while most teachers relied upon personalistic strategies. The most successful results were obtained by teachers who utilized a combination of both methods. (RW)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Administrator Attitudes, Discipline Policy, Dissent
Peer reviewedBratter, Thomas Edward – Psychology in the Schools, 1977
A nine-step discipline process, which can become a profound learning experience for potentially disruptive students, provides numerous opportunities to become more responsible and to adopt more productive behavior for those who move through the system. (Author)
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems, Educational Improvement, Elementary Secondary Education
Biggs, Donald A.; Brown, Joel M. – Journal of College Student Personnel, 1977
This study examines the relationship between student causal attributions of student misconduct, their endorsement of university disciplinary actions, and acceptance of student misconduct as being justified. Students tended to endorse more punitive disciplinary action for behaviors they viewed as caused more by trait than by environmental factors.…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Problems, College Students, Discipline Policy
Morissette, Marilyn; Koshiyama, Albert N. – Thrust for Education Leadership, 1976
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Child Advocacy, Discipline Policy, Racial Discrimination
Hunter, Tom – Thrust for Education Leadership, 1976
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Behavior Change, Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems


