Help your students improve their behaviour in school and encourage students to examine the reasons behind their misdemeanours. Date of Lesson November 8, 2007 GENERAL REFLECTION What I planned: The students at my practicum setting (a detention center) are 90-95% African American, from a county that is 36% African American; the census may average 20% girls and 80% boys. Mandy Manning is the 2018 National Teacher of the Year and the lead organizer of Teachers Against Child Detention (TACD), an alliance between educators and immigrant rights advocates. The frequent response is 1.) Illustration-focused school detention activities and tasks, for individual rather than group use, are particularly suitable for lower abilities. The sheets can be used to help correct undesired behaviors or, alternatively, to reinforce those students following the rules and exhibiting expected and desired behaviors. Berks is a long-term detention facility, which means that some of the families have been there for more than a year. Reflection Document: Pivotal Education provides this reflection worksheet to give to detention-serving students. send offender to the principal’s office for a conversation (and/or scolding), 3.) I do have some students who have been pushing their limits already though. call home. This is a resource I designed for pupils to reflect on their bad behaviour. Most were A Reflection Sheet is a very effective tool to use when a student is displaying unacceptable or acceptable behaviors and can be used in conjunction with the Class Rules. ... but only if the talk is productive and about the lesson. Detention can be a great time for students to reflect on and improve their behaviors. give detention (held after school typically with nothing to do but to stare or do homework), and finally, 4.) Honesty is the best policy and makes you a better person, and so to remind myself how important it is to be a moral person, I am writing and writing and writing and writing. The document is meant to outline an activity more productive than what is normally presented for students, and to prevent further behavior issues in the future. give a warning (move a clip to red or get a hash mark or a name written on the board), 2.) Exclusion and detention: Lessons from history about ‘military necessity’ and ‘national security’ ... authorization of massive violations of human and civil rights during World War II is that it is has generated a reflection upon the issue of racial and religious discrimination. Sep 7, 2013 - I have a really great group of students this year. I use it at KS3 during detentions for both my form class and normal classes. The principles of self-regulated learning can be applied to student behaviour: this set of ten (colour & double-sided) printable worksheets fosters student reflection during detentions and other behavioural interventions. Five Editable Detention Reflection Forms Want something reflective and Literacy-based for your secondary pupils to do in detention time? TACD is calling upon educators to demand that the U.S. government end the detention and criminalization of immigrant children and their families. The majority of the families have children younger than ten and are fleeing the Northern Triangle (Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador), where they faced persecution at the hands of gangs, abusive relationships, and other hardships. Constructive, thought-provoking detention work for KS3 and KS4 students. It is also a reflection of your very character and proves that you cannot be trusted.