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Giving Compass' Take:
• The Atlantic reports on how an Ohio school approaches discipline, mainly be training teachers to be more sensitive to past trauma and to work with students on emotional learning.
• As the debate over school discipline heats up, education initiatives should examine what's working and what's not: Can schools like this one in Ohio provide a model for the rest of the country?
• Here's why punishment in schools disproportionally affects minority students.
In education, initiatives tend to roll down from above. A district buys a new curriculum, or gets funding for a new program, and principals receive their marching orders, which they in turn hand down to teachers below.
That’s not the case at Ohio Avenue Elementary School in Columbus, Ohio.
The 19th-century corniced brick building is perhaps an unlikely home for experimental methods of nurturing children’s developing brains. The surrounding streets are lined with abandoned buildings, pawn shops, cash-advance outlets, and dollar stores. A large house with a boarded-up door sits directly across from the school’s playground. In Ohio Avenue’s zip code, half of the families with children under 18 live in poverty, as compared with 25 percent across Columbus and 17 percent nationally, according to census data.
Many of Ohio Avenue’s children have brushed against violence and other traumatic experiences in their short lives — abuse and neglect, a household member addicted to drugs, homelessness, to name a few. At schools like this, a small dispute can easily turn into a scuffle that leads to an administrator or school-safety officer corralling the kids involved, if not suspending them. But Ohio Avenue is trying to find another way: Every adult in the building has received training on how children respond to trauma. They’ve come to understand how trauma can make kids emotionally volatile and prone to misinterpret accidental bumps or offhand remarks as hostile. They’ve learned how to de-escalate conflict, and to interpret misbehavior not as a personal attack or an act of defiance. And they’re perennially looking for new ways to help the kids manage their overwhelming feelings and control their impulses.
Read the full article about rethinking bad behavior at one Ohio school by Katherine Reynolds Lewis at The Atlantic.