Craig Haims |
The
RSU14 Katahdin Program handles discipline much differently than most
traditional schools. Restorative practices
are an essential component to the culture of the alternative learning program,
and every staff member is fully invested in the process.
The
Katahdin program evolved out of the REAL School and has maintained a philosophy
that began in 2004, designed by a group of teachers at the REAL School, who are
still teaching in the program now. Back then, restorative practices were
something academics talked about, but they weren’t practiced in schools, said
Katahdin Program Director Craig Haims.
“It
was a philosophy that was very attractive to some educators, and we knew that
if we continued to use more punitive, exclusionary discipline that we were
going to lose our students,” Haims said.
Students were attending the REAL
School because they didn’t fit in the traditional environment. Many had missed
a lot of school time due to suspensions and expulsions. “We knew that had we
adopted that same disciplinary approach, we wouldn’t have a student body left.”
Collectively,
the staff studied restorative work to figure out how it would work in their
specific environment. “I think restorative practices has to be molded into the
community as it exists to work – there’s not one model that’s going to work for
every community,” Haims said. At the
REAL School, staff built the program together, adapting as necessary as they
determined what would best work for the students.
Now,
Haims said, there is a restorative learning process in place that all teachers
and counselors in the program can implement at a moment’s notice.
What,
exactly, are restorative practices?
While the full answer is long and complex, these disciplinary practices center
around relationships. At the Katahdin Program, that means having a set of norms
that everybody can understand and strive to follow. They call these norms their
Guiding Principles, Haims said, and when rules are broken, they use these
principles in the restorative process.
“Any
kind of behavioral mistake that a kid makes is going to probably violate one of
those norms,” Haims said. When that happens, they use the event as a learning
opportunity for the student. Their protocol includes naming the behavior and
why it was wrong, how it affected others in a negative way, and learning how to
make amends to others impacted by the behavior.
Amends often take the form of an apology, a letter, or an act of
service.
“It
takes the whole realm of discipline, which often can just feel punitive and
non-educational, and makes it educational,” Haims said.
“If
they don’t know their math facts, we’re not going to punish them, we’re going
to teach them,” said Haims. “If you don’t know your behavioral ABCs, like how
to get along in a community…you still have to teach that. And you have to teach
that until kids really understand more adaptive ways of getting along in a
community,” he said.
This
approach teaches students why the rules are relevant and important, and also
how to change so they can behave in a way that works for the community, Haims
said, which helps keep students from externalizing and getting less invested in
their education because they don’t feel like they belong. “When you don’t
understand how your behavior impacts others, you don’t really understand the
need to change. You just feel like you’re getting in trouble and it’s not your
fault,” Haims said.
“One
of the things we try to do with restorative practice is teach kids to
internalize their behavior and internalize an understanding of where their true
responsibility lies,” Haims said. “It
helps kids begin to understand that ultimately they’re responsible for their
own behavior and teaches them how to understand that and then work to improve
it.”
Restorative
practices can be challenging in a school environment, because the process takes
a lot of time, Haims said. Often, that means the restorative step is lost, and
people lose faith in the process because behavior doesn’t change.
“There
is no magic bullet in terms of changing behavior, it’s all a process.
Restorative works, scientifically, but it’s a process, and doesn’t change
behavior overnight,” Haims said. It’s a
framework based on relationships, so the closer staff is with students, the
better the process works. “The more you know kids, and the more they respect
you because you’ve taken the time to get to know them, the better the outcomes
are,” he said.
Restorative
practices work best as second order change, meaning the whole school agrees
that it’s the way discipline will be handled and does a deep dive into what the
work is all about and how to create restorative classrooms, Haims said.
Often,
schools take a first order change approach, hiring someone to do restorative
practices, but not changing the culture of the whole school. And while that
helps some kids, it can be tricky, Haims said, since there are essentially two
cultures operating in the same school.
Haims
acknowledged that with a small population of 22 students, restorative practices
are easier to implement. “I know how
lucky we are, and we structured our school largely around restorative practices
so that we can do it. That was an intentional decision made back in 2004,” he
said.
Haims
said the Katahdin program serves students who need a more relational, hands on,
integrated approach to education. “RSU 14 has made a really nice commitment to
alternative learning for many years, which we all greatly appreciate because we
feel like we are really making an impact,” he said.
“We’re really happy to be
doing this work in the context of a bigger, traditional school and we’re just
really grateful to the district for supporting this program and highlighting
the importance of supporting alternative learners.”
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