Toolkit for “School-to-Prison Pipeline Infographic”
In the majority of schools, the response to discipline issues is driven by administrators, counselors and, in a growing trend, by school resource officers and law law-enforcement officials. However, next to parents and families, classroom teachers are the adults with whom our students spend the most time. Classroom teachers often know their students better than anyone in the school. Teachers are on the front lines of their students’ growth and development, and their daily decisions can help divert students from the school-to-prison pipeline.
Teaching Tolerance offers a framework for how classroom teachers can help reroute the school-to-prison pipeline by shifting the approach they take toward students, from a punitive one to a responsive one. What follows are five shifts a teacher can make to keep students in school and out of the school-to-prison pipeline.
Teaching Tolerance offers a framework for how classroom teachers can help reroute the school-to-prison pipeline by shifting the approach they take toward students, from a punitive one to a responsive one. What follows are five shifts a teacher can make to keep students in school and out of the school-to-prison pipeline.
Shift 1: Adopt a social emotional lens. | Teach to the whole child. |
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Shift 2: Know your students and develop your cultural competency. | Learn and affirm the social and cultural capital your students bring to the classroom. |
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Shift 3: Plan and deliver effective student-centered instruction. | Teach with the purpose and urgency your students deserve. |
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Shift 4: Move the paradigm from punishment to development. | Model, reinforce and praise positive, healthy behavior. |
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Shift 5: Resist the criminalization of school behavior. | Keep kids in the classroom and police out. |
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