We expect our students to
demonstrate respect for themselves, for others, and for property. We
work to teach and to reinforce good behavioral choices. Our School
Climate program addresses the social and interpersonal aspects of student
behavior. The two major elements of Beaumont's program are as follows.
OLWEUS BULLYING
PREVENTION PROGRAM
Beaumont is participating in
the Olweus Bullying Prevention Program. The program helps children
understand that bullying is intentional harm-doing that is repeated over
time. It occurs in a relationship in which there is an imbalance of power.
Bullying affects the victims, the bullies and the bystanders. The
goals of the Olweus Program are: to reduce existing bully, victim, and
bystander problems among school children; prevent the development of new
bully, victim, and bystander problems; improve peer relations; improve
school climate. The children are learning the rules for a bully-free
school.
In Beaumont we will:
- not bully others.
- help students who are
bullied.
- include students who
are easily left out.
- tell an adult at home
and at school when we know someone is being bullied.
Click
here to view a power point on Olweus.
PATHS
PATHS is a science based ,
social-emotional learning curriculum that promotes self-control, positive
self-esteem, emotional awareness, and interpersonal problem-solving.
There are three main units. The self-control unit uses a metaphorical
story about a young turtle who learns to stop and calm down to effectively
think. The Feelings and Relationship unit focuses on teaching
different affective states in a developmental hierarchy beginning with basic
emotions (e.g. happy, sad, angry) and proceeding to more complex emotional
states (e.g. jealous, guilty, proud). Emotions are taught using
feelings faces that depict essential emotional cues. The unit teaches
that all feelings are OK to have and that some feel comfortable and some
feel uncomfortable. Behaviors, on the other hand, can be OK or Not OK.
The emphasis is to judge or evaluate behaviors, not feelings. Feelings
are signals that communicate information and can be helpful in making
decisions about what to do next. The Problem-solving unit builds on
the self-control unit and elaborates stop, calm down and think into 11
steps: (1) Stopping and thinking, (2)Problem identification, (3)
Feeling identification, (4) Deciding on a goal, (5) Generating alternative
solutions, (6) Evaluating the possible consequences of these solutions,
(7)Selectingthe best solution, (8) Planning the best solutions, (9) Trying
the formulated plan, (10) Evaluating the outcome, and (11) Trying another
solutions and /or plan, or alternatively reevaluating the goal, if an
obstacle results in failure to reach intended goal (1994 Kusche, Greenberg,
Developmental Research and Programs, Inc.)
The foundation of the PATHS
Curriculum is the ABCD Model of devlopment that suggests that successful
coping and adaptation (healthy personality development) is pacilitated when
there is a developmental integration of feelings (and emotional language),
behavior, and cognitive processes. (1994 Kusche, Greenberg, Developmental
Research and Programs, Inc.)
Examples of the units in the
primary division (K-2) include rules, compliments, feelings, the turtle
technique, sharing manners, playing fair, teasing, and listening to
others. In the the upper division (3-4) the units include rules,
control signal, problem solving meetings, feelings dictionary, gossip,
cooperative learning skills, identifying problems, feeling, goals, and
solutions, and stereotypes and discrimination. For more specific
information, please contact your child's classroom teacher.
The morning announcements will be
from the PATHS curriculum.