Tag Archive for 'discipline'

Poetic Justice

More than two dozen young people who broke into Robert Frost’s former Vermont home for a party and trashed the place are being required to take classes in his poetry as part of their punishment. Homer Noble Farm, an unheated farmhouse on a dead-end road, which is now part of Middlebury College, was vandalized last December at a party attended by more than 50 people. The Associated Press reports about 25 ultimately entered pleas, or were accepted into a program that allows them to wipe their records clean, provided they undergo the Frost instruction.

“I guess I was thinking that if these teens had a better understanding of who Robert Frost was and his contribution to our society, that they would be more respectful of other people’s property in the future and would also learn something from the experience,” said prosecutor John Quinn.

On Wednesday, Frost biographer Jay Parini attempted to show the vandals the error of their ways and the redemptive power of poetry. “Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,” he thundered, citing Frost’s The Road Not Taken. He called the line symbolic of the need to make choices in life.

Frost might also have observed that good fences make good neighbors.

Hit for Teacher

A Louisiana school board member is calling for tougher measures against students who hit teachers. Ricky Pitre, who serves on the Terrebone Parish school board, wants the school board to hold hearings before students expelled for hitting teachers can return to class. Sounds reasonable.

When I was punched by a 4th grader last year, the student was back in his classroom within minutes. When I had the temerity to question her judgement, I was lectured by my AP for being insensitive to the difficult lives of the children in my South Bronx elementary school.

Neither was any action taken against the parent who hit me during our school’s 5th grade “moving up” ceremony several years ago. Of course, in that case, I was clearly out of line and deserved to be smacked. I had, after all, told the woman’s son to tuck in his shirt.

The Limits of Good Intentions

Another example of the limits of good intentions, and the very real hurdles new teachers face in driving student achievement in our toughest schools. Baltimore Sun columnist Dan Rodricks writes about Ed Morman, a mid-career switcher who entered the Baltimore City Teaching Residency, but is now admitting defeat and quitting the field.

“The [teaching] job was the hardest I’ve had, by far,” Morman wrote, “but the potential for job satisfaction was far greater than I’d ever felt before. I told the kids that I quit teaching because I needed to make more money. This isn’t true. … I quit because of the stress I felt. The main cause of the stress was the kids themselves. I could never rise above the feeling of humiliation that I felt each day when I tried to address 20 or 25 kids and might find none of them paying attention to me. I seethed when I asked a student to stop talking and heard the response, ‘Get out of my face.’ So often I stood in the classroom wishing I could be anywhere else.

“I try to get a class to come to order while one kid is jumping on a second, a third calls out my name asking me for a pencil, a fourth demands that I let her go to the bathroom and a fifth needs to go see Miss Smith, while a sixth needs a pass to the nurse’s office and a seventh starts making silly, repetitive noises. … One day a cheap calculator hit the wall just above my head. Another day, it was a Jell-O cup, whose contents dripped down the wall and stained the picture of Harriet Tubman I had hanging on a bulletin board. …I had a meltdown after seeing how poorly my kids did on a standardized test.

Typically Morman shoulders the blame himself for his failure. “One thing I absorbed from my otherwise inadequate training is that it was up to me to make a difference,” he notes. “And I did make a difference, but not enough to sustain me through the nonsense.”

A sad, achingly familiar tale.

“Why You’re Not Going On The Trip”

Great post by teacher blogger Jose Vilson (hat tip: Joanne Jacobs) on giving kids what they need, instead of what they want. This is what enforcing classroom consequences looks like. Or should.

I care for you, and that’s why you’re not going on the trip tomorrow. Other teachers may protect you at their leisure. They may argue that you need the attention, and that you’ve deserved it academically, and to an extent they’re right. Yet, something makes my head itch at the thought that I’d let a repeat cutter attend a trip with students who truly deserve it. And of course, we know it’s not just you. The crew you hang out with influences your decisions to miss out on my afternoon announcements, my calls to you for better behavior and respect for all teachers, not just the ones you feel like respecting.

Read the whole thing here. First-rate stuff. I hope his administration backs him up.

Obama Ate My Homework

A pair of Scranton, PA high school students have been suspended, and one of the pair claims he was forced to resign as class president, for leaving the campus to see Barack Obama at a campaign stop near their school. They took pictures with the candidate and even had Obama sign excuse notes for their teachers, to no avail.

The Price of Disruption

The Gadfly the other day picked up on an interesting story out of Las Vegas, where school officials are struggling with record numbers of expulsions and wondering whether alternative schools are worth the cost. According to the Las Vegas Sun, Clark County, Nevada refers kids with discipline problems to special “behavior” schools, where the students stay for nine weeks before returning to their home campus. Hardcore troublemakers who are expelled end up at “continuation” schools. After their stints they are not permitted back at their original schools, and end up being passed around the district. Then came the eyebrow raiser:

“We think that if reasonable interventions aren’t working, if a student has clearly decided that he doesn’t want to learn and, moreover, is bent on discouraging his peers from learning, then he should exit the system for good,” the Gadfly opined. “That means spending the remainder of his days in academic boot-camp—no privileges, no fun, no free time, just hard learning and hard discipline. Attending the school one wishes should not become a “right” divorced from all responsibilities. It is a privilege and should be treated as such.”

It’s good to hear the language of personal responsibility balancing the rhetoric of rights for a change. But why not just take away the right to attend any school? If we agree that a student has a right to be educated on the public dime until a certain age, and the student for whatever reason has demonstrated an inability to function in a school environment, why not just tutor him at home for an hour or two a day? It would push accountability for the child’s behavior back to the home where it arguably belongs.

Expensive? Maybe not. What’s the cost in lost future earning power to students whose education is sacrificed to chaotic, disruptive schools? We’re used to viewing the problem of the disruptive student through that student’s eyes, rather than examining the price paid in lost time and wasted opportunity by the rest of a school community. The problem of disruptive students contributing to an environment in which learning is impossible is something of a silent epidemic in our worst schools. The silence is the product of the favored myth that if a student is disruptive, it must be the teacher’s fault for running an insufficiently engaging classroom. Thus to admit to a lack of classroom control is to admit to being a bad teacher. While this may be true in some instances—there is no shortage of bad teachers—in many others it’s clearly nonsense. As I write this, I can hear the inevitable response. The best teachers are both rigorous and engaging. Yes, isn’t it pretty to think so? Finding enough of those teachers to fill a school is a daunting task. Finding enough to fill entire school systems is a Sisyphean one.

Perhaps the biggest problem with the “engagement myth” is it puts the onus on teachers to plan lessons around classroom management instead of academic content. Student engagement becomes the alpha and omega of planning, with challenging and rigorous material shunted aside. Thus the need to manage a small handful of profoundly disruptive students can change the entire equation in a school for the worse. The classroom becomes a place organized around keeping kids entertained and on-task. Seen through this lens, disruption becomes a cause, not an effect of failing schools.

Meanwhile, back in Las Vegas, don’t be surprised if the radical solution to the problem of continuation schools is to close or curtail them and push the problem back to the home school. After all, if the teachers are doing their job, then discipline problems should be at a minimum. I had a principal once who announced at the beginning of the year that we had suspended too many children the previous year and that we were “really going to have to tighten up on discipline this year.”

I had thought all those suspensions were tightening up on discipline.

Culture of Acceptance

“There is a culture of acceptance towards violence in the city’s public schools. Administrators, faculty, and staff shake their heads in disbelief, but do nothing to change the broader picture,” writes former Baltimore middle school teacher Julia A. Gumminger in a piece on the Baltimore Chronicle and Sentinel’s web site. “Staff members look the other way when violent incidents such as rioting and fighting happen. ‘It’s just the way things are’ is a common phrase spoken in the hallways. Student-on-student fights happen daily, and now student-on-teacher assaults are happening more often.”

Gumminger writes about her experience in Baltimore, but it will sound familiar to any teacher at a failing city school. When I was punched by a 4th grade boy last year, the consequence was to be screamed at by the AP about the need to be more understanding. At least that was my consequence. The student was sent back to his classroom. Gumminger goes on at dispiriting length describing conditions in her school. It’s not pleasant reading, but it’s important.

“These are our schools, where our children go to learn. How can any child learn in an environment like this?!” she asks. “How can we sit by, and let an entire city’s population of children go uneducated? How can we accept this culture of violence as “just the way it is”? We need to collectively decide that enough is enough, and make a conscious effort to stop accepting this. Until we do, our city (and others) will continue to lose great teachers, and our children will continue to be on the receiving end of the biggest injustice in this nation.”

You’ve heard it before? You can’t hear it enough.

Suspension of Disbelief

First there was the Washington Post story about elementary school kids getting tagged as sexual harassers. Yesterday, Joanne Jacobs posted a story about an 8-year old in Colorado suspended for sniffing a Sharpie marker. It made us wonder what else students are getting in trouble for these days. A quick survey of suspension-worthy offenses making in news in the last week range from serious offenses to seriously strange.

Two girls were suspended from a Pennsylvania high school for writing a “murder list” with the names of 48 students and teachers on it; a boy in Palm Beach, Florida did something similar. A South Carolina 8th grader was suspended for wearing a KKK t-shirt, while a couple of Cleveland area middle schoolers were sent home for putting racially inflammatory posts on You Tube. A Chattanooga 7th grader hid a gun (real) in his locker, while three teenagers in Ontario, Canada were suspended for pointing a machine gun (fake) out of a car window in their school parking lot. A 8th grader in Phoenix realized he had left a knife in his knapsack over Spring Break and, mindful of the school’s strict weapon policy, reported himself to school officials. He was suspended anyway. A 7-year old in Maryland may be expelled for bringing his uncle’s gun to school, thinking it was a toy. In Florida, a 15-year old was charged with a felony for poisoning a teacher’s water with Visine because “he didn’t like the class or her.” Six Florida baseball players were suspended from the team after an alleged hazing incident. A large group of middle school students in James City, Virginia were caught texting each other to plan a cafeteria food fight. School officials thwarted the plot, suspending 15 miscreants. Meanwhile an even larger group of West Virginia high school students got ten days each for breaking into the school and moving about 600 desks into the hallways. They also hid thousands of dollars worth of telephones and calculators, but didn’t damage any of them, and ignited a book in a microwave.

A female high school student in Massachusetts wore the wrong color sweater to school and refused to take it off. A St. Louis freshman wore shorts on a recent 70-degree day and was suspended for violating a rule that prohibits them between November 1 and April 31. A Haverhill, Massachusetts 11-year old accused of sexually harrassing two girls claimed he was only quoting the TV show South Park. A case of suspended animation in Alaska, where a fifth-grade boy got in trouble for drawing Anime-style pictures of nude females. His parents say it’s artwork. Finally, a first grader in Brockton, Mass was suspended for three days after school officials said he sexually harassed a girl in his class by allegedly putting two fingers inside the girl’s waistband while she sat on the floor in front of him.

For the record, it’s not just the kids. A Santa Ana, California elementary school teacher was busted for having a gun in school, and the coach of the Marblehead (Mass.) High School football team drew a two-game suspension for chewing tobacco while coaching.

Do Not Pass Go. Do Not Collect $200

Officials in Australia have an answer for truancy: throw the parents in jail. New South Wales Premier Morris Iemma’s proposal has been pilloried by education and welfare experts who say the plan is over the top, and “will only hurt the most disadvantaged students.”

The plan announced earlier this week gives courts the power to impose “special orders on parents of children who don’t attend school, including the ability to force them into rehabilitation, mediation or counselling. If they fail to comply, they could face jail,” reports the Sydney Morning Herald.

“It’s not about punishing parents that are doing the right thing, or because of circumstances beyond their control – either the kids are disobedient, or there is a problem with drugs or alcohol – it’s about those parents who are physically, mentally, or financially able to do the right thing but point-blank refuse to accept their responsibility,” says Iemma. The new legislation was aimed at a “very small minority of parents who simply won’t do the right thing.”

Suspension of Disbelief

About half of all 9th graders are suspended at least once a year in the Milwaukee Public Schools, which may have the highest suspension rates in the country. Superintendent William Andrekopoulos tells the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “We’re doing a lousy job of sending kids out of the classroom.” Actually, it sounds like they’re doing an excellent job of sending kids out of the classroom. Keeping them inside seems to be the problem. But is it a problem?

When I began teaching in New York City, I was caught off guard by the outrageous, over-the-top student discipline problems in many classrooms, especially my own. But what really shocked me was the unwillingness of principals to suspend kids, regardless of the infraction. It didn’t take long to figure out the reason for the reluctance. At the time, principals were being judged by two criteria: test scores and suspension rates. You could have low test scores as long as your suspension rate was also low; it was believed to be indicative of running a tight ship. If you didn’t suspend kids, it meant you had few discipline problems. You don’t have to be a genius to figure out that the best way to achieve a low suspension rate is by not suspending students.

In my first year of teaching, I was in a collaborative team teaching classroom. One afternoon, I sought out the AP to complain about a seriously disruptive student. “Well, Mr. Pondiscio,” she replied in her most condescending tone, “imagine how much harder it would be if you were the only adult in the room!” She flashed me a Professor Umbridge smile, indicating the conversation was over. The very next morning my plan book was collected for review. It was returned with a note reminding me to have all of my plans for the week in writing, in advance, with instructional aims and state learning standards clearly written out.

Message received. Control your class and don’t bug me with this nonsense. We will not be suspending this, or any child. My school was not necessarily indicative of all schools, or even all inner city schools. Still, it is an article of faith in the era of high expectations and every-child-can-learn-at-a-high-level that if a child is disruptive, the fault is the teacher’s for bad classroom management, poor lesson planning, or both. It’s a lovely, idealistic notion that gets in the way of student achievement.

It is a testament to how deeply ingrained is the notion of teacher accountability for student misbehavior, that my palms are sweating as I type this. Even now, I feel like I am admitting to something dark and shameful. But it’s the truth: I had students that I couldn’t consistently and effectively control. And if I’m brutally honest with myself, the fear of disruption learned in my first days as a teacher probably led me to be much more authoritarian than I would otherwise have been as a teacher. That, in turn, is part of the reason why I’m writing this post right now, instead of a lesson plan. Disruption in many struggling schools is endemic. It sucks the life out of classrooms and gets in the way of teaching and learning to a degree that few people outside of the classroom appreciate. Suspending disruptive students is not a particularly elegant solution to the problem, but not doing so sends a powerful message to other students that their education doesn’t matter very much.

American EducatorA few years ago the AFT did a poll in which 17 percent of teachers reported losing four or more hours of teaching time per week because of disruptive student behavior; another 19 percent said they lost two or three hours. In urban areas, the figure rose to 21 percent losing four or more hours per week; 24 percent in urban secondary schools. “It’s hard to see how academic achievement can rise significantly in the face of so much lost teaching time, not to mention the anxiety that is produced by the constant disruption (and by the implied safety threat), which must also take a toll on learning,” reported the American Educator. Just so.

Let’s go back to that disruptive student whose instructional time is being lost when he or she is suspended. In a class of 21, for every three minutes the disruptive student is in the room, 60 minutes of student on-task time is lost (3 mins x 20 other students). Take a seriously disruptive student out of class for three days, and he’s lost three days. Keep him in, and the class has lost 60 instructional days cumulatively.

Remove a disruptive student from the class and that child does not learn. Leave him inside, however, and neither does anyone else.