A school network where I used to teach recently made the news in Chicago for a somewhat controversial discipline strategy, where students (or their families) are charged actual fines for misbehavior. Students can also be held back a grade for discipline related issues, even if their grades are satisfactory.
So here is the tl;dr scoop:
There are about a dozen of these schools in Chicago...they're public charter schools, so anybody can enroll, but they can also kick anybody out. Discipline at these schools is *really* strict...not making eye contact with the teacher, wearing the wrong color belt, or having snack foods are some of the "minor" infractions that can get you demerits, let alone more traditional infractions like talking or fighting. Getting 4 demerits in a 2 week period gives you a detention, and a bill. The more demerits you get, the more detentions you have to pay for. If kids reach a certain demerit benchmark, they cannot progress to the next grade, no matter what their academic performance is. I had at least one student in that situation.
The school says that it's unfair to add extra hours for teaching staff without paying them (and if you have to stay after school, a teacher does too!), AND that without providing a monetary incentive to show up, parents and kids don't always take detention seriously. Others think that this nickel and dimes already very poor kids, and sends the wrong message. Plus, hypothetically, it would hurt poorer families worse than more wealthy families (although there aren't many kids with money going to Nobel schools)
The schools are academically stronger than their neighborhood schools, and I actually really liked doing work there....but systems like this also have a "weeding out" effect.
What do you think? Should schools be able to charge fines for misbehavior?
Full article can be found here: http://www.suntimes.com/news/cityha...other-infractions-costly-at-some-schools.htmlThe Chicago Sun Times said:A Chicago charter school franchise often touted by Mayor Rahm Emanuel has pocketed some $387,000 in fees over three years by issuing demerits for “minor infractions” ranging from not sitting up straight to openly carrying “flaming hot” chips, parents and students charged Monday.
The list of forbidden conduct at the Noble Street Charter Network is “as long as my arm’’ but adds up to a “dehumanizing discipline system that looks a lot more like a reform school than a college prep,’’ Julie Woestehoff of Parents United for Responsible Education charged at a news conference Monday.
At Noble Street schools, four demerits within two weeks triggers a three-hour detention costing $5. More than 12 detentions lands students in a behavior modification class costing $140.
Twenty-five to 36 detentions in one school year: two discipline classes, carrying a $280 pricetag. More than 36 detentions? Kids have to repeat the grade.
The stringent disciplinary code that Noble Street officials say many parents find attractive netted up to 10 Noble campuses $386,745 over the last three school years, according to documents obtained under a Freedom of Information Act by Parents United, the Advancement Project civil rights group and a student group called VOYCE.
The biggest windfall, the FOIA showed, was garnered at Noble’s Rowe-Clark Campus, which raked in $28,935 last school year alone amid an enrollment of 538.
Noble Street officials said they merely charge a “fee” — not a “fine’’ — to partially cover the cost of supervising detention or behavior classes.
So here is the tl;dr scoop:
There are about a dozen of these schools in Chicago...they're public charter schools, so anybody can enroll, but they can also kick anybody out. Discipline at these schools is *really* strict...not making eye contact with the teacher, wearing the wrong color belt, or having snack foods are some of the "minor" infractions that can get you demerits, let alone more traditional infractions like talking or fighting. Getting 4 demerits in a 2 week period gives you a detention, and a bill. The more demerits you get, the more detentions you have to pay for. If kids reach a certain demerit benchmark, they cannot progress to the next grade, no matter what their academic performance is. I had at least one student in that situation.
The school says that it's unfair to add extra hours for teaching staff without paying them (and if you have to stay after school, a teacher does too!), AND that without providing a monetary incentive to show up, parents and kids don't always take detention seriously. Others think that this nickel and dimes already very poor kids, and sends the wrong message. Plus, hypothetically, it would hurt poorer families worse than more wealthy families (although there aren't many kids with money going to Nobel schools)
The schools are academically stronger than their neighborhood schools, and I actually really liked doing work there....but systems like this also have a "weeding out" effect.
What do you think? Should schools be able to charge fines for misbehavior?