Study Document
Pages:11 (3283 words)
Sources:5
Document Type:Capstone Project
Document:#66397993
Internship Project: Restorative Justice for Secondary School Students Restorative Justice for Secondary School StudentsTABLE OF CONTENTSContentsRestorative Justice for Secondary School Students 3Needs Assessment. 3Objectives 4Project Planning 4Project Description 5Project Implementation. 6First phase implementation 6Second phase implementation. 7Project Evaluation. 8Project Reflection. 8Sample artefacts 9References 11Restorative Justice for Secondary School StudentsNeeds AssessmentManaging students misbehavior is one of the significant challenges our school has faced for a more extended period. The use of a punitive approach, including zero-tolerance policies, has caused much harm to the students bodies. For instance, expulsion and suspension policies remove at least 50 students from school every year due to violations of simple rules. Apart from expulsion and suspension, the use of caporal punishment has been witnessed in many instances for the students who have committed simple violations such as failure to submit assignments in time. In general, such a mode of punishment has significantly contributed to massive school dropout and academic failure. Additionally, around 20% of our school population have engaged in physical fights, some traumatized while others have started using drugs to handle the schools unfriendly environment. (Pavelka, 2013)Besides, the hash treatments have not conformed to the students behavior, instead of worsening their conduct and attitude, thus isolating them from fellow peers. Otherwise, some of the students misconducts have been necessitated by the adults behavior; therefore, failing to address the issue holistically would soon destroy the sense of community set up in our school. Absurdly, some of the criminalizing and exclusionary discipline practices have adopted racial inequalities within the school. Some of our students have been put on suspension for defiance and disrespect based on cultural disparity. Consequently, in what is seen as a school-to-prison pipeline, most students of color are highly alienated from school through punishment, handed over to law enforcement in school, and later pushed to jail for the same mistakes as their white counterparts. (Payn & Welch 2015)Therefore, the therapeutic justice approach would look into who has been harmed by the students misconduct other than what laws have been broken. Also, the approach would consider the losses the victim has incurred instead of who the offender is. Notably, some of our neighboring schools have adopted the restorative justice approach with significant success. The approach was also used in criminal justice systems where offenders were considered an approach to crime and later developed restorative practices in schools to discipline. (Pavelka, 2013)Consequently, following an agreement by the school board of management, teachers, parents, and various education stakeholders that the school adopts a restorative justice approach to discipline students to curb the vast school dropouts and mass failure registered recently, I was given the directive to look at how Restorative Justice will be implemented in the school. The restorative practice will bring together the student accused of causing harm, the students family, the victim, or the victims during hearing processes. (Hornby, 2014)ObjectivesThis project has two broad objectives that include; one, to train various stakeholders, including the teachers, students, and the administration, on the usage and importance of Restorative Justice practices for the school to build a community and advance a healthy relationship among the teachers, students, administrators, and social workers to teach the social-emotional and conflict-resolution skills necessary to minimize conflict.Secondly, to establish how Restorative Justice Practices and training of students and other school stakeholders would incorporate technology use. This is to enable everyone to attend the session virtually to observe the current Covid-19 safety protocols. Students will therefore participate from home in line with the directive by the Ministry of Education. (Payn & Welch 2015)Project PlanningRestorative Justice enables the students to navigate some conflicts on their…
…network with various education experts and colleagues from around the world. I have come up with several activities that will enable them to gain understanding and knowledge on improving the learning environment for our students community and staff.Moreover, the session will be facilitated by both experts in restorative justice practice and colleagues from schools that had implemented the approach earlier. The presentations will directly relate to the issues we are likely to experience as we begin the approach implementation. I have also attached the list of various activities that will be carried out on that day. Please consider facilitating this conference.A chart illustrating some of the differences in approaches to issues by punitive and restorative justice practices.PUNITIVE Vs. RESTORATIVE PRACTICESPunitiveRestorativeMisbehavior refers to breaking school regulations or letting the school down.Misbehavior refers to any harm (emotional/mental/ physical) inflicted to one person/group by an individual or group.Concentration is on what took place and establishing blame and guilt.Attention is on problem-solving by expressing feelings and solution by exploring how to address problems when it reoccurs in the future.Adversarial relationship and process. Includes an authority with the power to make penalty decisions in conflict with the offender.Promote Dialogue and negotiation with each and everyone involved in communication and cooperation with one another.Infliction of pain or unpleasantness to punish and deter the student from a repeat of misbehavior.Restitution is a way of restoring both parties, the aim being reconciliation and acknowledging ownership for choices.Strictly observe rules and adherence to due processObservance of relationships and achievement to everyones desired outcome.Conflict and wrongdoing are projected as impersonal and abstract individuals against the school.Conflict and wrongdoing are perceived as interpersonal conflicts with learning capacity.School fraternity are spectators, represented by staff members handling the situation; those directly affected are not participatory and powerless.Accountability refers to understanding the effect of actions,…
Study Document
Restorative Justice The purpose of this article was to show that restorative justice is significantly more satisfying as compared to courts for both offenders and victims. This was achieved with a randomized experimental design known as Reintergrative Shaming Experiments RISE. This project is used to compare the effects of standard court processing with those of restorative justice intervention known as conferencing. In the article, the RISE data is used to examine
Study Document
They predict age and gender variations relate to bullying concerns. Of the 25 cartoons implemented in the study, two depict characters with different shades of skin color where skin color appeared to be an issue. One cartoon relating to sexual orientation was not used in several countries. Smith et al. report Olweus to assert bullying to be characterized by the following three criteria: 1. It is aggressive behavior or intentional
Study Document
..This perspective is from the U.S.A.; in Europe, violence in school and the concern about violence may not be at similar levels, but it is undoubtedly a topic of major concern (Smith, 2003, p. 1). This article also makes the important point that school is intended as a developmental and educational environment and that violence in its various forms negatively effects and detracts from the goals of education. Another general work that
Study Document
Criminal Justice: The Death Penalty Reasons for topic selection Causes of racial prejudice and discrimination Juvenile in delinquent society theory Culture and values Official and unofficial values The effectiveness of the death penalty The death penalty is irreversible The death penalty is barbaric Changes to the death sentence Implemented changes Sentencing guidelines Bifurcated trials Automatic appellate conviction review Proportionality review The importance of proposed changes Anticipated outcome Life imprisonment; alternative to death sentences The costs Decency standards Overall efficiency Policies in support of incarceration Conclusion References Background Despite the controversy over how effective it is
Study Document
PSYCHOSOCIAL ISSUES AFFECTING African-American STUDENTS PSYCHOSOCIAL ISSUES AFFECTING African-American STUDENTS "They never want to hear what I have to say…it doesn't matter who started a fight, or what a teacher said to you that made you mad. You might have something heavy going on at home but no one asks. They're not interested. They just want you out of the school." 17-year-old 11th grade African-American female student, NYC (Sullivan, 2007, p. iii). In New York City, one of
Study Document
Program Attendance Policy Proposal and Analysis As we are nearing the end of the third school year of the P.A.S.S. program it is beneficial to evaluate the standards and practices which have been set forth through the past three years and determine the efficacy of them. In accordance with the Pennsylvania Standards for Elementary and secondary education school principals (January 2001), data driven assessment of the policies is due. The need