Saturday, March 1, 2014

Implementing the U.S. Department of Education's New School Discipline Policies


A Three-Year Positive Behavioral Support Implementation Blueprint, and Two Upcoming Federal Grants to Pay for It 

Dear Colleagues,  

   With Spring Training starting this week in Florida and Arizona, the weather--hopefully--will begin (continue) to warm up soon.

   Last week, I attended and presented a workshop at the annual convention of the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) in Washington, DC.  My presentation was titled, Rethinking PBS and RtI:  Essential Changes Needed to Improve Services, and I discussed numerous strategies and approaches that go well beyond those recommended by the U.S. Department of Education's various Technical Assistance (TA) Centers in these, and other school improvement, areas.

   We strongly recommend that you review these evidence-based school improvement, positive behavioral support, and response-to-intervention approaches.  Critically, the U.S. Department of Education typically publicizes only the approaches that it has funded.  Thus, in order to be "good consumers," you need to research and evaluate the many other effective programs and approaches that are available--choosing those that will best help you meet your student, staff, and school needs.
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This Week's Topic:  Effective Practices that Address the Department of Education's Recent School Discipline Guidelines. . . . and Two Upcoming Grants to Fund Them

   Last month, the U.S. Department of Education (DoE), in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Justice, released a school discipline guidance package (CLICK HERE) to assist states, districts and schools in developing practices and strategies to enhance school climate, and ensure that these policies and practices comply with federal law.  Some of the outcomes targeted school climate, decreasing suspensions and expulsions, and addressing the disproportionate representation of minorities relative to school discipline.
  
   The DoE identified three guiding principles for policymakers, district officials, school leaders, and stakeholders to consider as they work to improve school climate and discipline:

  • Create positive climates and focus on prevention;
  • Develop clear, appropriate, and consistent expectations and consequences to address disruptive student behaviors; and
  • Ensure fairness, equity, and continuous improvement.

   As noted above, the resource materials (the Directory of Federal School Climate and Discipline Resources) reported only on federal resources.
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NEW Positive Behavioral Support Implementation Guidebook

   To supplement the materials referenced above, we are making a comprehensive, updated (February, 2014) Positive Behavioral Support System Implementation Guidebook available to you 

(Click on the Link below;  Find the document titled:  PBSS School Implement Fact Sheet.   

CLICK HERE TO ACCESS RESOURCE
   This new 100+ page resource can help your school or district address all of the goals in the DoE's new school discipline initiative. The multi-tiered process described has been implemented nationwide--in urban, suburban, and rural schools.  The Guidebook has the following sections:

  • Project ACHIEVE's Positive Behavioral Support System (PBSS)  
  • A Step-by-Step PBSS Implementation Blueprint 
  • Professional Development Approaches and Resources
  • Evaluation and Outcomes 
  • Appendices 
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 ... An Upcoming Grant. . . or Two  

   Now that the federal budget has been passed by Congress (last month), the DoE is beginning to post upcoming grants that will soon be available to states, districts, and schools.
   
   One grant, The Elementary and Secondary School Counseling grant will be available on March 18th and due on May 2nd.  In the past, this grant has funded school-wide positive behavioral support initiatives, as well as training in and services for students with social, emotional, and behavioral challenges.

   A second grant, The School Climate Transformation grant will be available on April 30th and due on June 13th. This is a new grant, and it appears to be directly related to the federal school discipline guidelines discussed above. 


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   Meanwhile, as always, please feel free to share these and other materials that you find on the Project ACHIEVE website with your colleagues, education and community leaders, and parents across your district or state.

Best, 
  
Howie