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Peer reviewedWinborne, Claiborne R. – Educational Leadership, 1980
An in-school suspension program in Virginia is characterized by individualized academic and/or behavioral intervention. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, In School Suspension, Individualized Programs
Peer reviewedScott, David M.; Friedli, David – Journal of Drug Education, 2002
Surveys school principals in rural and urban Nebraska schools to compare policies and procedures on school attendance, and to contrast the use of disciplinary procedures for attendance, violence, and substance abuse. Principals generally reported similar disciplinary actions for most problems. For recurrent offenses and serious problems,…
Descriptors: Attendance, Discipline Policy, Principals, Student Behavior
Reep, Beverly B. – Executive Educator, 1991
Describes a South Carolina elementary school principal's program for decreasing discipline referrals and creating a positive school environment. The Great Behavior program involves weekly drawings and prizes for well-behaved students and an end-of-school party and pie-throwing event. Following a first-year 47 percent reduction in discipline…
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Elementary Education, Incentives, Positive Reinforcement
Peer reviewedMcDaniel, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 1989
Five criteria useful in evaluating any discipline model will help evaluators make sense of a complex issue. Discipline policies should be philosophically sound, pedagogically defensible, psychologically appropriate, pragmatically feasible, and professionally evaluated. (TE)
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Discipline, Discipline Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
Shore, Rebecca Martin – Phi Delta Kappan, 1996
Describes how a typical high school in Huntington Beach, California, curbed disruptive student behavior by personalizing the school experience for "problem" students. Through mostly volunteer efforts, an adopt-a-kid program was initiated that matched kids' learning styles to adults' personality styles and resulted in fewer suspensions…
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, High Schools, Individualized Instruction, Program Implementation
Peer reviewedNoguera, Pedro A. – Harvard Educational Review, 1995
Disciplinary measures based on social control produce prison-like schools that remain unsafe. Coercive strategies disrupt learning and foster an environment of mistrust and resistance. Humanizing the environment and encouraging responsibility and a sense of community are possible solutions. (SK)
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Educational Environment, Prevention, School Culture
Peer reviewedShupe, Jim – NASSP Bulletin, 1998
Describes a Prescriptive Discipline Plan developed by teachers at a Florida middle school. The plan featured three offense categories: minor infractions handled by teachers, intermediate offenses (cheating, disrespect, and insubordination) handled by administrators, and serious offenses (fighting, assault, sexual misconduct) invoking automatic…
Descriptors: Committees, Discipline Policy, Intermediate Grades, Middle Schools
Peer reviewedDayton, Jean Mueth – Clearing House, 2000
Summarizes discipline procedures for students with disabilities, as put forth in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act 1997. Discusses discipline procedures for exclusion from current placement of 10 days or less; discipline procedures for suspension/expulsion of more than 10 days; and discipline procedures for weapons/drug offenses and…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Discipline, Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems
Woods, Ruth – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2008
UK schools commonly employ a behavioral discipline method comprising rules, rewards awarded when children follow the rules and sanctions when children break them. To date, this approach has had only limited success in halting classroom disruption (Render, Padilla and Krank, 1989; Riley & Rustique-Forrester, 2002; Gutherson & Pickard,…
Descriptors: Sanctions, Participant Observation, Peer Groups, Discipline Policy
Wolf, Elaine M.; Wolf, Douglas A. – Evaluation Review, 2008
Disciplinary alternative schools have a reputation as gateways to the juvenile and criminal justice systems. The authors conducted an evaluation of an intervention (Strategies for Success) designed to divert seventh-, eighth-, and ninth-grade alternative school students from this gateway. They used propensity score matching and a multivariate…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Education, Attendance Patterns, Multivariate Analysis, Objective Tests
Honawar, Vaishali – Education Week, 2007
Videos of teachers that students taped in secrecy are all over online sites like YouTube and MySpace. Angry teachers, enthusiastic teachers, teachers clowning around, singing, and even dancing are captured, usually with camera phones, for the whole world to see. Some students go so far as to create elaborately edited videos, shot over several…
Descriptors: Internet, Telecommunications, Videotape Recordings, Teacher Rights
Thornberg, Robert – Ethnography and Education, 2007
The aim of this study is to investigate and explain inconsistencies within the social constructions of school rules as they take shape in everyday interactions between teachers and students, and to explore how students interpret these inconsistencies. An ethnographic study is conducted in two primary schools in Sweden. According to the findings,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Culture, Discipline Policy, Dress Codes
Tollefson, Kaia – Lexington Books, 2008
"Volatile Knowing" refers to the potential for positive change that can result when parents and teachers talk with each other about the politics and policies of externally defined accountability mandates in education. This text tells the story of twelve teachers and parents who breached the unofficial, but deeply inscribed home/school divide to…
Descriptors: Accountability, Politics of Education, Parent Teacher Cooperation, Parent School Relationship
Milewski, Patrice – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2008
Teachers' institutes for public elementary school teachers in Ontario began to be implemented in the middle of the nineteenth century as a result of the efforts of Egerton Ryerson Superintendent of Schools for Canada West as Ontario was then known. They were based on similar practices that Ryerson had observed on an educational tour in 1845 during…
Descriptors: State Officials, Teacher Attendance, Foreign Countries, Teacher Certification
Ruder, Robert – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2006
A school day includes addressing student discipline. Regardless of the safeguards or policies that are in place in the school and regardless of whether they are sanctioned by the school board or whether they are stated in the student handbook, students push limits. Failure to address discipline issues will weaken every aspect of the school's…
Descriptors: Principals, Discipline Problems, Discipline Policy, Educational Environment

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