Restorative practice for the modern educator

Post on 23-Feb-2016

31 views 0 download

Tags:

description

Else Crooks, Betty Lapeyre and Lauren Stelmaschukl. Restorative practice for the modern educator. Icebreaker. Introduce yourself One interesting thing about you What brought you here. How to Use Restorative Practice. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Restorative practice for the modern educator

RESTORATIVE PRACTICE FOR THE MODERN EDUCATOR

Else Crooks, Betty Lapeyre and Lauren Stelmaschukl

Icebreaker

Introduce yourself One interesting thing about you What brought you here

How to Use Restorative Practice Introduction, icebreakers, buuilding connection,

getting to know each other, check in/out, building positive relationships, building a foundation, etc.

Deliver and process course content, introduce and gather information about a new course project/topic, discuss, sharing ideas, dealing with classroom issues, solving problem, etc.

Discipline, conflict resolution, problem solving, remediation, mediation, taking responsibility and accountability, supporting behaviour change, etc.

So...What is Restorative Practice Restorative Practice is...

Respectful: distinguishing behaviour from person Fair: engaging, with explanations and clarifying

expectations Restorative: by building relationships and, when

necessary, repairing harm Restorative Practice does...

Develop empathy through reflection, insight, learning

Enhance Responsibility and Accountability Support positive behaviour change Strengthen relationships

Video Clip

Why the Circle?

Equality Safety Responsibility Facilitation Ownership Connections

Restorative Principles

Restorative empathic listening Restorative discussion Mediation Problem-solving Conflict-resolution Win-win situations Facilitating learning, education

planning, classroom activity

Social Discipline Window

Using Circles with Students“A basic premise of RP is that the increasing

inappropriate behaviour in schools is a direct consequence of the overall loss of connectedness in our society.”

RP fosters inclusion, community, accountability, responsibility, support, nurturing, and cooperation.

Builds respect and knowledge the students have for one another

Unites the class as a community Students have to take responsibility for how they

interact with each other Student take responsibility for their learning Quieter students are heard-equality is fostered

Using Circles With Students When using circles in the classroom two goals are

accomplished... Helping students get to know each other better Delivering course content

Classroom circles can be designed to connect students as well as deliver and process course content

Examples of circles might include: check in/out, lit. circles, class discussion, current events, reviews, developing guidelines, generating ideas, reviewing expectations, answering questions as a group ...

Caution that the guidelines and circle expectations must be clear and judicious

Using Circles to Respond to Incidents A circle go-around is an effective tool for

engaging students in a discussion to resolve an issue

2 critical questions to address: 1. What harm was caused? 2. What needs to happen to make things right? Note: Asking “Why” is a useless endeavour,

stick to objective questioning!

Other questions that may be helpful:

Using Circles to Respond to Incidents

What Have you thought about since the incident?How do you feel about what happened?What has been the hardest part of this for you?Who has been affected by this incident?How have they been affected?What was your part in the problem?What needs to happen to make this rightWhat can we do to make sure this doesn’t

happen againHow have you felt in the past when..... ?

Classroom Issue: Role Play In groups of 5-7 elect one person to be the

facilitator, and 2 to be the “offending” students, and all else are the affected students in the class

Scenario: There are 2 students who are constantly disrupting class, making snide remarks and constantly chattering during instruction. The Teacher decides to use a circle to address this issue with the class

Use the questions included in your handout to respond to this incident.

Role Play Debrief:

How did this exercise work? Was there a successful resolution? Can you see this working in your

classroom? What would you change to make this

approach fit your educational philosophy?

Compass of Shame

Figure 4. The Compass of Shame(adapted from Nathanson, 1992)

The Questions...When Things go Wrong!

What happened? What were you thinking of at the

time? What have you thought about since? Who has been affected by what you

have done? In what way? What do you think you need to do to

make things right?

Questions…When Someone has been Harmed

What did you think when you realized what had happened?

What impact has this incident had on you and others?

What has been the hardest thing for you?

What do you think needs to happen to make things right?

Discipline...

Significance...

Building lasting relationships Repairing the harm that has been done Taking responsibility for ones actions The person must buy in...but trust can be

established through the informal circle Repetition of circles as intervention leads

to buy as well Goal is behaviour change due to

increased empathy

Debrief

Closing and Questions

Check out go-a-round