Sunday, November 30, 2014

Inside look at in-school suspension classroom isn't what many might suspect


There is a small room with a bright yellow door labeled "ISS" at the campus for Chico Unified School District's continuation schools.

The in-school suspension room at Academy For Change, Nov. 20
If you walk inside, you'll be surprised at just how quiet it is: students from different school districts are leafing through books, snoozing on desks or just sitting quietly. The hum of a heater is the loudest thing you'll hear on a late fall day.

It definitely isn't what most people would expect for an in-school suspension classroom.

Dave Shockley, former police officer and CUSD's in-school suspension teacher for junior high and high schools, said that people will be surprised when they come in because they have heard all of these horror stories. But those stories are few and far between.

"Ninety-nine percent of the time, we just get kids that are angry," he said. "Angry at life in general. And they come in here and they have a quiet place to be."

That isn't to say that those intense moments don't happen. Shockley often takes the brunt students' anger, which often emerges as a stream of curses directed at him. Other times, students or groups of students will come in, upset and cursing, and storm out before they can calm down.

"(Most) of the time they're angry at their home life and they take it out on the first adult they see," he said. "And I'm here."

The students in ISS, who can be from any junior high or high school, are not required to do anything while in the room but finish their time in ISS, which varies depending on the incident that got them sent there in the first place. It can be anywhere from two to five days.

Shockley has plenty for the students to do, evident in the bookshelves filled with classroom textbooks in the ISS room, and does offer the students work to do. But "if they turn it down, that's on them," he said.

He doesn't enforce any student in ISS do work, especially if they refuse to do it.

Similarly, students will sometimes leave the ISS room, and Shockley has no way to make them stay if they really want to leave. When they come back, he'll let them know they need to stay in the room, and he calls parents to let them know if their child left that day.

"If they're going to leave, they're going to leave," he said. "But they'll be back."

How many students are in the ISS room at any given time just depends on what is happening at schools in the district. Sometimes it's full and sometimes there are only a few students in there.

David McKay, principal of continuation schools in CUSD, said that the classroom is like a time-out room. Students who are not able to work in class without being disruptive or who have violated school rules dictated by Education Code will be sent to ISS from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. until their time is up.

“The idea is for them to complete work in a struct environment," McKay said, "where they could get help if they need to get help or get their stuff done instead of being at home unsupervised.”



Sunday, November 16, 2014

Local administrators explain expulsion

"I've expelled kids, and every single time we leave with a handshake."

Mike Allen, Chico High School associate principal, said his attitude when disciplining kids is not a personal one. It's about the student learning from his or her actions.

Mike Allen, Chico High School associate principal.
Photo by Chico High School/Chico Unified School District
"I guess I understand that kids make mistakes," he said. "I work with teenagers. If they didn't make mistakes, I wouldn't have a job."

Though the schools in Chico Unified School District have their own subtle differences in disciplinary practice, many operate under similar guidelines. And all follow California's Education Code, which outlines certain instances when suspensions and expulsions are allowed or required to take place.

Students have to be recommended for expulsion and attend an expulsion hearing before they can be expelled, Allen said. The school board has to approve this expulsion, as well.

If a student is expelled, there are a lot of terms and conditions they have to follow to come back to their original school.

Allen said he generally looks at two things when deciding if a student can come back to Chico High School after an expulsion: "If the student will be a danger on campus or if the student cannot be trusted to not engage in that behavior again."

Laurie DeBock,assistant principal of Bidwell Junior High School, said that certain issues call for certain disciplinary actions. Some leeway in disciplinary actions is allowed for minor instances, but major ones have guidelines specified by Education Code.

Laurie DeBock, assistant principal of Bidwell Jr. High School.
For example, if a student repeatedly yells, is defiant or won't work in class, that usually calls for detention.

If a student is caught possessing illegal substances, like marijuana, the student would be suspended and sent to Academy For Change, DeBock said.

"Many of our kids that get suspended over to AFC, it's for repeated defiance," she said.

Expulsion is immediately recommended in cases in which students bring a firearm to campus, among other serious offenses.

Education Code calls for administrative expulsion hearing panels made up of school administrators in the district.

David McKay, principal of Academy for Change, Center for Alternative Learning, Oakdale Secondary and Fair View High School, is also the district's chair of expulsion panels.

David McKay, principal of continuation schools and chair of expulsions.
"I do about 75 to 90 hearings a year," he said. "So for me, it's like expulsion Tuesday."

The goal of the hearing is to make families understand that the expulsion, if approved, is like a rehabilitation plan, McKay said.

But the hearing is also there to make sure the kid understands there will be consequences for their behavior. Sometimes, a scary expulsion hearing is what is needed to get that across.

"There's a lot of legalize going on," he said, "but that's all we've got."

Sunday, November 9, 2014

New school board officials elected in Chico

Gary Loustale will join incumbents Eileen Robinson and Kathleen Kaiser on the school board for Chico Unified School District.

Butte County voters elected three members this year on Nov. 4. Though four were officially listed on the ballot, Cynthia Van Auken decided not to run and did not participate at the CUSD Candidate Forum Sept. 25 at City Hall.


Kathleen Kaiser. Photo by CUSD.

Loustale's background includes experience as a businessman in information technology, chairman of the Measure E committee and a career technology education and advising for the Butte County Office of Education.

Kaiser, who is serving her third term on school board, is also a faculty member and academic statewide senator at Chico State.

“As a board member, I feel like it’s my job to try to see that Chico lives up to its very best," Kaiser said at the candidate forum. "That’s going to take the best from all of us, because we don’t have the money we need. But I think we have the inspiration and the dedication.” 


Eileen Robinson. Photo by CUSD.
Robinson has been a board member the past four years and been involved with the district for 42 years in various roles as a volunteer, employee and committee member. She continues to advocate increasing student physical and emotional health and has also worked on coordinating special education programs with general education classes.

"Providing the best educational opportunity for all students is the number one goal of Chico Unified," she said at the candidate forum. "And I support that goal."

All three newly elected, or re-elected, board members bring different perspectives from their professional backgrounds to their position on the board, which will be valuable for Chico and its schools.

Every candidate mentioned a focus on implementing common core and moving forward with the renovation plan the district started drafting in 2012 and for which recently approved design plans at its middle schools.

“We know we have to change for the common core, for our student body,” Kaiser said at the candidate forum. “We’re moving to middle schools, we’re building new facilities and we’re restoring our current facilities.”

Loustale added his perspective on the Local Control Accountability Plan, for which he had a chance to attend a few community meetings.

"I think it's new-chartered territory. So that means we have to go forward on something we haven't done before," he said at the candidate forum. "And so we need to look and see and review each year, which is what LCAP wants us to do; they want us to review, make sure that we're on the right track."

The board also includes members Elizabeth Griffin and Linda Hovey, both elected in 2012.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

In-school suspension report indicates improved quality of discipline in Chico Unified School District

The number of in-school suspensions for Chico Unified School District are much higher than its number of out-of-school suspensions, according to data compiled by the district.



But why do these numbers make a difference? It turns out that in-school suspensions are allowing children to remain not only in school, but in classrooms, supervised, with a credentialed teacher and access to counseling services.

David McKay, principal of Academy for Change, Center for Alternative Learning, Oakdale Secondary and Fair View High School, said that in-school suspensions are somewhat like study hall: students are in there working on stuff quietly for most of the day, and the teacher often discusses life-skills issues with them individually.
David McKay, principal of continuation schools in CUSD.

"The idea is for them to complete work in a structured environment where they could get help if they need to get help or get their stuff done instead of being at home unsupervised," he said. 

This is a stark contrast to out-of-school suspensions, where the punishment for disruptive behavior in school is sending students home where they can misbehave, self-medicate or be unsupervised, which is not actually a punishment, McKay said. 

"It's an alternative to traditional suspension, which we've found doesn't work. It's not much different than the logic of suspending a kid for not coming to school. ‘Hey you're truant, so we're going to suspend you from school, because your truant,'" he said. "They're already struggling in school; now we're taking them out of school more."

Students who are sent home also don't necessarily have access to counseling services or a way to help deal with any trauma they are experiencing that is most-likely the underlying cause of their misbehavior, McKay said. 

The elementary schools have a different in-school suspension site, which is at McManus Elementary School. But every other campus sends kids to Fair View High School for its in-school suspension program. The truth of the matter is that not all schools can afford in-school suspension classrooms or the teacher(s) to supervise students. 

"Any school can adopt its own in-school suspension program. It's just challenging to allocate your (monetary) resources accordingly," McKay said. "So it's more effective in our situation to do it one classroom for the district."

And the in-school suspension program has made strides recently to combat out-of-school suspension numbers. 

The program used to require that any students sent to in-school suspension had to be there for five days. If the offense was minor and didn't warrant five days of in-school suspension, the child would be sent home instead. 

Now the program accommodates two and three day suspension instances. And that means there are less children being suspended out-of-school.

The program also has two counselors available to students, who occupy a counseling center that was designed and built by the students of Fair View High School. 

McKay said the schools' biggest challenge is the overall approach they take concerning students. This has a lot to do with how students who are suspended are perceived. 

“I think if people were honest and they weren't trying to be politically correct that the average person on the street would associate a kid in an in-school suspension classroom as being a ‘bad kid,’” he said. “But what we're finding out is that more and more of our students are behaving the way they are because they’re traumatized; that their brain is telling them they’re in danger. … It’s not necessarily because they’re a bad kid, it could be that what they were doing is a coping mechanism to deal with their trauma.”

The trauma-informed approach is something that McKay has backed wholeheartedly, and cites it for being one of the biggest positive changes at the school. This includes changes within its in-school suspension program and training of that program's teacher and counselors.