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Houck, Don – NASSP Bulletin, 1981
The "discipline ladder" approach emphasizes that each successive offense of the same type should result in punishment made more uncomfortable by designed increments. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Discipline, Discipline Policy, High Schools, Program Descriptions
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Stessman, C. W. – NASSP Bulletin, 1985
At Liberty High School (Missouri), in-school suspension is a corrective, rehabilitative process. The successful program features a Saturday School, infraction-specific self-help packets for students, staffing by a full-time paraprofessional, visits by subject-area teachers, and meetings with counselors. (PGD)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Classroom Techniques, Discipline Policy, High Schools
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Krajewski, Bob; Martinek, Patty Denham; Polka, Beverly – NASSP Bulletin, 1998
Profiles two San Antonio high schools' creative discipline approaches to supplement their official policies. At one high school, staff find out what "carrot" will work for grounding their "frequent-flier" kids. This usually involves devising attendance/behavior contracts for earning driving or other privileges. The other school has an…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Creativity, Discipline Policy, High Schools
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Kergaard, David A. – NASSP Bulletin, 1985
This high school's successful suspension alternative assigns disruptive students to an alternative classroom for several days, where they are isolated from the remainder of the student body all day, and excluded from participation in or attending all regular programs and cocurricular activities. (DCS)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Discipline Policy, Discipline Problems, High Schools
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Gallagher, Edward F.; And Others – NASSP Bulletin, 1987
The high schools in Framingham, Massachusetts, use the Framingham Interagency Rehabilitation Model as an alternative to taking students accused of first-time offenses against major school discipline regulations to court. The process involves a quasijudicial hearing, court followup of student progress, and cooperation among several school and…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Community Involvement, Discipline, Discipline Policy
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Toth, Charles; Siemaszko, Ed – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
Instead of relegating their assistant principal to discipline and attendance, the Frankfurt (West Germany) American High School restructured the AP role to focus on instructional leadership, employee supervision, collegiality, training, and positive student interactions. Conflict resolution, lunchtime intramurals, town hall meetings, and a…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Attendance, Conflict Resolution, Discipline Policy
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Heller, Gary S. – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
Well-disciplined schools make appropriate school discipline a part of every curriculum, program, and practice. Key organizational variables include staff and community involvement, sensitivity to students' racial and socioeconomic concerns, and effective intervention strategies, such as the anger-management seminars, awareness discussion groups,…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Community Involvement, Cooperation, Democratic Values
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Slaby, Robert – NASSP Bulletin, 1983
Explains how a survey of staff, students, parents, and community members was used to develop an equitable and effective high school dress and behavior code. Describes the sanctions established for violations and a mandatory after-school instructional program for students suspended from regular classes. (Author/PGD)
Descriptors: After School Education, After School Programs, Behavior Standards, Community Attitudes
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Russo, Charles J.; Delon, Floyd G. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
Disagreements over teachers' First Amendment, academic-freedom rights in curricular contexts are again receiving judicial attention. Two federal cases involving termination of exemplary high-school drama and creative-writing teachers have upheld school boards' authority to control curriculum context in disagreements over permissable subject matter…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Boards of Education, Censorship, Controversial Issues (Course Content)