Restorative Practices in Schools

Stage of Innovation
1. Idea
2. Start-up
3. Growth
4. Established
5. Scaling

A Student Restorative Justice Team uses restorative practices to prevent crime and conflict in their schools. This youth-centered project increases empathy and conflict resolution skills for both the referred students as well as the youth leaders, facilitators and mediators on the team.

Problem

When facing crime and conflict in schools, often teacher, administrator and school resource officer tools are limited to suspensions, expulsions, tickets and other punishments. In 2008-09, St. Vrain Valley School District (SVVSD) School Resource Officers (SROs) arrested 236 juveniles and 1172 students were suspended or expelled. Of those suspended or expelled, 33% were Latino youth, disproportionate to the 27% Latino population in the schools. In the 2009-10 school year, 63000 days of unexcused absences occurred and over 1800 students were suspended or expelled. (CO Dept of Education 2011) Criminalizing school-based offenses has led to accusations of a schools-to-prison pipeline in which academic failure, dropout rates, truancy and exclusionary discipline practices are key elements.

Solution

LCJP offers the only restorative alternative to using the criminal justice system or serious school consequences to reduce crime and conflict in the SVVSD. Restorative Justice (RJ) strengthens community, builds accountability and focuses on harm and repair in a way that can help reduce the likelihood of re-offense. Students often have no means of repairing harm caused by their behavior, leaving both the victim and offender feeling isolated. Furthermore, students have little opportunity for school-bonding and successful reintegration once an incident has occurred. RJ increases empathy by giving the victim the chance for equal voice; the offender the opportunity to discover how the victim, community and himself/herself have been affected; repairing harm to the fullest extent possible; teaching students to be peer leaders by empowering youth to take the lead in RJ process; and keeping students in school and out of the justice system. RJ directly breaks the schools-to-prison pipeline.

Example

In the Pilot Project (PP), the full spectrum of discipline offenses—from repeated classroom disruption to relational issues between students to possession of drugs to assault—can be addressed using a restorative intervention led by a trained team of middle and high school students. Referrals come to a coordinator from school personnel, school resource officers, and students themselves, and are then assigned to members of the Student RJ Team who can lead—in either English or Spanish—Connection Circles for community building, Restorative Mediation for relationship problems, and Solution Circles when an offense has occurred. The lifecycle of each of these processes is based on the principles of relationship, respect, responsibility, repair, and reintegration. The members of the Student RJ Team facilitate repairing harm to the fullest extent possible by giving equal voice to all participants, identifying how each person has been affected and creating a restorative agreement. In the 2010-11 school year, 89% of the 100 referred students completed their agreements, 111 days of suspension were prevented (an increase of 777 school hours), 52 tickets/court referrals were avoided, and 6 students who would have been expelled were able to remain in school. In addition, 95% of process participants—victims, offenders, school personnel, student community representatives and parents—reported that they were “satisfied” or “very satisfied” with the restorative process. The PP directly addresses the need to keep students in school, enhance empathy, and reduce crime and conflict in our schools.

Marketplace

The Pilot Project (PP) is the result of a partnership with the Longmont Police Department School Resource Officer (SRO) Program and the St. Vrain Valley School District (SVVSD) who are also working to reduce crime, suspensions and expulsions in the schools. In an effort to include all stakeholders, one of the SVVSD Area Assistant Superintendents, the SROs of all the pilot schools, two representatives from school administration, the Sergeant of the Longmont SROs, City of Longmont Children, Youth and Family Services and RJ field experts sit on an Advisory Group for the PP to solidify the collaborative relationship necessary for continued partnership. Currently, we are the only organization offering a restorative alternative in the SVVSD, as well as in the Longmont community.

Meet the Team

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August 14st, 2012

Fourteen students, program staff and the 2 pilot School Resource Officers participated in a day-long teambuilding and RJ Skills retreat in June 2012 at CalWood Education Center. Our primary goals were to give students a sense of working together effectively; restorative principles of relationship, respect, responsibility, repair and reintegration; and begin to shape the culture on the Student RJ Team. We had a great time and feedback was positive from all participants.

August 14st, 2012

A senior student facilitator from the Student RJ Team, Rea Blash, participated in an online RJ and Empathy Panel with Edwin Rutsch from the Center for Building a Culture of Empathy, Laura Snider and Beverly Title (moderated
by Deb Witzel) on 7/31/12. His discussion about how RJ enhances empathy in referred students as well as Student Team members made a great impact and helped raise awareness about youth participating in RJ. He represented his teammates well.

August 14st, 2012

Ruth is a junior in high school for the 2012-2013 school year and was the Student Summer Intern for the Restorative Practices in Schools program. She completed 150 hours of program support between June and August, focusing primarily on youth-led training at the Summer Training Institute and soliciting donations from local restaurants and businesses. Ruth acted as Assistant Trainer at the Student Summer Training Institute this July--a 40 hour training for new and returning members of the Student RJ Team that includes all of the basic building blocks of participation: RJ basics, acting as a...

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Growth Tracker

Stage: Milestone 2 of 4
Start
03/30/12
End
Achievement
Milestone Reached!
Date 08/14/12
Impact Report
Student Intern acts as assistant trainer at 40 hour Summer Training Institute
Date 08/14/12
Ruth is a junior in high school for the 2012-2013 school year and was the Student Summer Intern for the Restorative Practices in Schools program. She completed 150 hours of program support between June and August, focusing primarily on youth-led training at the Summer Training Institute and soliciting donations from local restaurants and businesses.
Impact Report
Student Facilitator participates in online panel on Empathy in Restorative Justice
Date 08/14/12
A senior student facilitator from the Student RJ Team, Rea Blash, participated in an online RJ and Empathy Panel with Edwin Rutsch from the Center for Building a Culture of Empathy, Laura Snider and Beverly Title (moderated by Deb Witzel) on 7/31/12. His discussion about how RJ enhances empathy in referred students as well as Student Team members made a great impact and helped raise awareness about youth participating in RJ. He represented his teammates well.
Impact Report
Student RJ Team Retreat June 2012 Successfully Completed!
Date 08/14/12
Fourteen students, program staff and the 2 pilot School Resource Officers participated in a day-long teambuilding and RJ Skills retreat in June 2012 at CalWood Education Center. Our primary goals were to give students a sense of working together effectively; restorative principles of relationship, respect, responsibility, repair and reintegration; and begin to shape the culture on the Student RJ Team. We had a great time and feedback was positive from all participants.
Milestone
Youth are leading outreach and education campaign
Date of Completion 08/15/12
Completed
Student Summer Intern selected
Completed
Recruitment for Student RJ Team in all three pilot schools
Completed
Student RJ Team Retreat June 2012
Completed
Student Summer Training Institute July 2012
Completed
Students participate in Colorado RJ Summit August 2012
Milestone
SROs and School Personnel are involved in innovative ways
Date of Completion 12/31/12
In Progress
School Admin helps to train 1 Late Start Student Team Meeting per semester
In Progress
SROs attend and assist at the Student RJ Team Retreat on 31st May
In Progress
2 SROs attend at least 1 session of the Student Summer Training Institute to build relationship with Student RJ Team
In Progress
School Personnel attend 3 weekly Student RJ Team Meetings to build relationship
Milestone
Youth facilitate 60% or more of RJ Processes
Date of Completion 12/31/12
In Progress
Train 10 student facilitators
Completed
Train 10 student mediators
Completed
Train 10 youth community members
In Progress
Mentoring between experienced Student RJ Team members and new students
In Progress
Monthly RJ Skills training at Late Start meetings
Milestone
10% of total referrals are self-referrals indicating a culture shift toward youth empowerment, awareness & conflict prevention.
Target Completion Date 05/31/13
In Progress
Give 5 presentations about conflict resolution opportunities available in the pilot schools so students know how to access them.
In Progress
Promote the use of restorative practices in classrooms through 3 teacher training and teambuilding opportunities.
In Progress
Offer 3 trainings to middle school students on basic RJ principles and skills to encourage them to utilize self-referrals.
In Progress
Develop capacity of middle school student teams by using them in 3 processes
In Progress
Present documentary video at least 5 times at each of the pilot schools
Milestone 2
Youth facilitate 60% or more of RJ Processes

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