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Detroit Public Schools, Michigan
Detroit
Public Schools have been concerned with the behavior and discipline
problems that are occurring in many of their elementary and middle
schools. Students seemed to lack the necessary skills to effectively
deal with the multitude of situations they confront on a daily basis
inside and outside of school. Truancy, the use of profanity, and
the lack of respect for authority was too common in its schools.
Fighting, poor classroom conduct, a perception of gang activity,
and other troubling behavior led to an overall feeling by the teachers
and the school staff that something had to be done.
School officials decided that they needed a systematic approach
to teach its students appropriate social skills and to help students
manage their own behavior. Detroit was looking for a program that
would provide teachers and other school staff with the skills to
effectively address students' behavior in all situations. Detroit,
with EMSTAC's guidance and assistance, decided to implement Project
ACHIEVE, a school-wide discipline program developed at the University
of South Florida, that has proven effective in over 20 schools around
the country. Findings that have emerged from the longest running
site show:
- a
75% decline in special education referrals;
- a
67% decline in special education placements;
- a
28% decline in discipline referrals to the principal
- student
academic improvement; and
- improvement
in teacher's perceptions of the school climate.
Project
ACHIEVE is based on the idea of early intervention, dealing with
a problem before it becomes larger. Focusing on the "power
of prevention," the program is designed to improve social skills,
provide techniques for problem-solving and anger management, and
decrease acts of aggression and violence. Project ACHIEVE training
involves all school staff, including teachers, administrators, paraprofessionals,
transportation providers, cafeteria workers, and cleaning staff,
and all students to encourage consistency in responses to students'
appropriate and inappropriate behavior.
Detroit
is still addressing their original need of improving student discipline
in their schools. The Linking Agent finds that this has taken the
form of trying to "emphasize the use of the intervention in the
whole school." At first, this involved implementing the STOP and
THINK practices in all the classrooms. This year, she has focused
on "trying to have each class review the steps." To do this, she
has developed a training video library for the school. Each video
addresses one of the many social skill lessons in the program and
they can be played in all rooms simultaneously via a closed network
within the school, or teachers can show the videos individually.
She has had success with this, expressing that "Teachers really
enjoy it. Kids even come up to me and ask why we haven't seen one
in a while." In fact, the Linking Agent has found that she spends
most of her time (approximately 70 percent) supporting teachers
in her school. The rest of her time is divided between working with
district and building level administrators.
Next
year, the Linking Agent has indicated that she would like to take
a different approach. She would like to conduct individual skills
assessments to see the ways that the program has impacted students.
In addition, she mentioned wanting to conduct small group discussions
to accompany the assessments.
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