2015-2016 Middle School Handbook
Transcription
2015-2016 Middle School Handbook
Burlington Community School District Middle School Student Handbook 2015—2016 ALDO LEOPOLD EDWARD STONE WOLVES JETS 3075 SUNNYSIDE AVE 3000 MASON RD Phone: 319-752-8390 Phone: 319-752-4393 FAX: 319-752-8447 FAX: 319-752-7437 BURLINGTON MIDDLE SCHOOLS _______________________________ STUDENT NAME STUDENT HANDBOOK 2015-2016 ALDO LEOPOLD EDWARD STONE WOLVES JETS 3075 SUNNYSIDE AVE 3000 MASON RD Phone: 319-752-8390 Phone: 319-752-4393 FAX: 319-752-8447 FAX: 319-752-7437 BCSD Website: http://bcsds.org On behalf of all staff, welcome to the Burlington Middle Schools. We are here to provide assistance to you, so please feel free to ask questions or request help at any time. Every school must have rules, regulations and high expectations so that all students can function in an organized, safe manner. Please read this handbook with your parents and become familiar with the policies, procedures, and expectations of our schools. The key to achievement and success in school will be your desire to learn. Best wishes to each of you for a very exciting and rewarding school year. This handbook has been prepared to help explain and clarify the procedures, policies, and expectations in the Burlington Middle Schools. We hope that it will be helpful to students, parents and staff in working closely as we guide our students through the middle school experience. If you have questions, please contact your respective middle school. Each student will be issued a planner/handbook at the beginning of the school year. If it is lost, the student will be required to replace the planner/handbook at his/her own expense. Your Middle School Principals, Mark Yeoman, Principal Aldo Leopold Tim Cradic, Associate Principal Aldo Leopold Brian Johnson, Principal Edward Stone Casey O’Rourke, Associate Principal Edward Stone ACCEPTABLE USE VERIFICATION 2 BURLINGTON MIDDLE SCHOOLS GENERAL INFORMATION 2015-2016 DISTRICT MISSION STATEMENT Inspiring and challenging students through diverse opportunities. MIDDLE SCHOOL GOALS All students will: Show improvement in communication of ideas with better reading, writing, speaking, listening and technology skills. Be able to follow written and verbal directions. Abide by the established rules of conduct and safety. Show respect, courtesy, and friendliness to all people. All students will participate in class activities and complete their assignments on time. REGULAR SCHOOL HOURS 7:50 AM - 3:01 PM Busses arrive 7:25 AM Students are not to arrive at school prior to 7:35 am. Students are expected to wait outside unless instructed otherwise by the building staff. All students are to leave the building and grounds by 3:10 p.m. unless they are under the direct supervision of a staff member. On early dismissal days students are to leave the building and grounds within 10 minutes of dismissal time. OFFICE HOURS 7:00 AM - 3:45 PM CODE OF CONDUCT I CHOOSE TO BE HERE. I AM HERE TO LEARN AND ACHIEVE. I AM RESPONSIBLE FOR MY ACTIONS. I CONTRIBUTE TO A SAFE, RESPECTFUL, COOPERATIVE COMMUNITY. I COME WITH A CLEAR MIND AND HEALTHY BODY. THIS IS MY SCHOOL…I MAKE IT SHINE. BREAKFAST AND LUNCH PROGRAM A federally regulated breakfast and lunch program are provided. Students will not be allowed to leave the campus for lunch unless accompanied by the student’s parent or guardian or written permission from the student’s parent or guardian. If school is delayed, breakfast will not be served. Money may be added to the students account each morning as per each building’s designated time. Lunch cards may not be transferred from one student to another and students may not borrow, buy, sell, or trade lunch cards for food items. Other district level lunch procedures may be found in the lunch section of the Board of Education section. CAMPUS VISITORS We welcome parents, guardians, and other community citizens who want to visit our school. All visitors must check in at the office, sign in, and receive a visitor’s badge. Students who attend another school may not visit during the school day. CARE OF SCHOOL PROPERTY Students are expected to treat school property with care and respect. Students found to have damaged or destroyed school property may be required to reimburse the district, and may be subject to additional disciplinary actions. SCHOOL RULES AGAINST BULLYING • We will not bully others. • We will help students who are bullied. • We will include students who are easily left out. • When we know somebody is being bullies, we will tell an adult at school and an adult at home. Bullying among school children is a very old phenomenon. Some children are frequently and systematically harassed and attacked by other children, and many adults have experienced it from their school days. This harassment may be done directly (open attacks, words, gestures or physical contact) or indirectly (being excluded from the peer group or rumors being spread) cyber bullying is also prohibited. The Burlington Community School District has implemented the Olweus Bullying Prevention Program. Goals of the Olweus Bullying Prevention Program are to eliminate existing bully/victim problems in and out of the school setting and to prevent the development of new problems. An additional goal is to achieve better peer relations at school and to create conditions that make it possible for both victims and bullies to get along and function better in and out of the school setting. 3 COMMITMENT TO SAFETY Recognizing that every student has the right to a safe environment where everyone is treated with respect: I understand that I have an essential role in school safety and violence prevention. I will immediately report any threats of violence, suicide, presence of weapons or explosives to school administrators, allowing them to investigate and determine the seriousness of the report. I will do all I can to stop harassment of others. I will promote the acceptance of individual differences, recognizing that diversity contributes to the strength of the Burlington Middle Schools. I understand that cyber bullying is not allowed due to the negative impact on the learning environment. Student’s Name: ______________________________________________________ Class of _______________ Witness: __________________________________ Date: _____________________________ Parent’s Name: _______________________________________________________ Date: _____________________________ RESPONSIBLE THINKING PROCESS (RTP) Our school will continue with the Responsible Thinking Process (RTP) behavior management program. Burlington schools have found RTP to be the most effective way to reduce student disruption and enhance students’ ability to resolve problems by teaching self-management responsibilities. Our Behavior Management Philosophy The BCSD believes all students are responsible for their own actions and must be taught to respect the rights of others. Through the RTP program, students learn to think of ways to meet their needs and respect the rights of others in the school. Students have a right to learn and teachers have a right to teach in a safe environment. No students have a right to disrupt at school, especially if they are preventing other students from learning or are threatening the safety and rights of others. Classroom Expectations Students are not allowed to disrupt in class or anywhere on the school property, which includes the school bus. When disruptions occur, students are asked to think about their actions through a series of questions and compare their actions to the expectations or standards. If a student persist in breaking rules or continues with disruptive behavior, then their right to be in that location is removed. A student is then assigned to the Responsible Thinking Classroom (RTC). Students stay in RTC until they indicate to the RTC teacher they are willing to follow the expectations or standards. At that point the RTC teacher provides learning opportunities to work out a plan which is then used to negotiate their return with the person where the disruption occurred. Students are permitted to go to all other classes and locations where they have been responsible, such as the library, cafeteria, and hallways. The RTP has been successfully adopted in our school with very positive results. Students have learned to self- manage their behaviors in a highly responsible way. Due to the reduced number of classroom disruptions and efficient way disruptions are handled, there is an increase in classroom learning time. This process is based on two books by Ed Ford: Discipline for Home and School, Books One and Two. If you have internet, you can visit the RTP website at www.responsiblethinking.com. If you have any questions, please feel free to call us here at school. Students are sent to the Responsible Thinking Classroom (RTC) with referrals AFTER they have received a warning concerning their disruption. 1st Warning** 2nd Warning (Which results in referral being written) “What are you doing?” “What are the rules?” “What will happen if you disrupt again?” “What are you doing?” “What did you say would happen the next time you disrupted?” “Where do you need to go now?” **The student gives up their 1st warning if they refuse to answer above questions. The student then creates a detailed plan before negotiations with the person who initiated the referral. The plan is signed by the student, the person who referred the student and the RTC teacher. The student returns to class after negotiating the plan with the teacher who initiated it. The plan is logged into the students file and kept for future meetings. 4 POSITIVE BEHAVIOR INTERVENTION SUPPORT AT MIDDLE SCHOOL Positive Behavior Intervention Support (PBIS) will allow us the opportunity to provide a consistent and fair behavior plan. Students achieve higher levels when they know expectations and feel safe. PBIS sets detailed expectations in every area of the school while putting an emphasis on safety. PBIS is not new to education. It is based upon a long history of research in areas of behavior and in structural design. Positive behavior needs to be taught through modeling, explicit instruction, and practice. The success of PBIS will improve with time and with the participation of our families. School behavior plans that are followed in the home greatly improve their effectiveness in the school. STRUCTURED LUNCH During student lunch time students are assigned structured lunch for behaviors outside of the classroom, or is not a classroom behavior disruption (tardy, misbehavior on playground, behavior or hallway misconduct). HOMEWORK HANGOUT Homework Hangout is assigned to students to get extra help by a teacher after school to complete assignments. Students are required to stay after school with the teacher unless other arrangements have been made with the teacher or administrator. NON-ESSENTIAL / NUISANCE ITEMS Students are not permitted to have cell phones or any other nonessential items that are potentially disruptive to the learning environment on their person during the school day. This includes but is not limited to iPods, Mp3 players, pagers, electronic games and other items not on a recommended list of student supplies. Students who use their cell phones or students with a ring or vibrating cell phone while school is in session will have their phone confiscated. No gum or candy is allowed at school. 1st Offense- Nuisance item confiscated and returned to the student at the end of the day after the student has notified a parent. 2nd Offense- Nuisance item confiscated and returned to a parent after the parent receives and signs the Nuisance Items policy. 3rd Offense Nuisance item confiscated and the student is assigned to the Responsible Thinking Classroom (RTC) for one class period. Nuisance item is returned to a parent after the RTC plan is complete. 4th Offense – Turn items into office on a daily basis and pick up at the end of the day SCHOOL LOCKER Each student is assigned a locker with a padlock and or lock combination. No personal padlocks may be used on hallway lockers. The student is to use only his/her assigned locker. This locker is to be used for essential school items only. No open containers or bags of drinks or snacks are allowed in student lockers. Students are expected to keep the lockers in neat condition, be sure they are locked, and not give anyone their locker combination. Report any loss and/or vandalism to the office immediately. Lockers are school property and subject to search by authorized school personnel as provided under Iowa Law (HG528). STUDENT EXPECTATIONS The purpose of our discipline plan is to provide a safe and productive school environment. To help achieve that, students should: Follow directions the first time given. Be on time with the appropriate materials. Treat people and property with dignity and respect. Keep hands, feet, objects, and mouth to yourself. Talk at a conversational level with appropriate language. Students must have a signed hall pass from the “hall pass” section in their assignment book when in the hallways during classes. BICYCLE/SKATEBOARD/ROLLER BLADES/MOPEDS The school is unable to assume responsibility for loss, theft, or damage, and it is recommended that each student provide a lock for their bicycle. All bicycles should be pushed on school grounds. Skateboards and roller blades are not allowed on school grounds. Students who are of legal age to ride mopeds to school ad have the moped legally registered may ride them to school. They must follow all of the traffic rules, park in a legal parking spot, and register the moped with the school office in order to maintain this privilege. 5 TECHNOLOGY BEHAVIOR MATRIX Technology is a vital part of education. To increase student assess to technology, the district assigns Chrome Books to all middle school students. A behavior matrix has been created to reinforce positive expectations of students. Every student will start at Tier 1 and have access to all sites the teachers have deemed necessary for learning in their classrooms. At the end of each month, we will look at the criteria established in the third column to determine if a student has earned the privilege to move to the next tier to gain access to new resources. Students must meet all of the criteria in order to move up a tier or stay at their current spot. This is a privilege the student has earned based on good academic and school behavior. These privileges can be lost by missing the criteria for a month or by principal discretion based on a violation of a school rule that results in in-school/ out of school suspension. The tier each student is placed in will be the only resources each student may access in and out of school. There are also certain district restrictions that will apply during the school day as well (ie: no Facebook access during the school day). Level: Apps/ Sites Available Criteria: Tier 4: Complete access to Video Sites and Social Networking; YouTube, Netflix, Hulu, Twitter, Facebook, and much more • • • • • No grades lower than a C 3 missing assignments or less 2 RTC referrals or fewer 2 Tardies or fewer 1 unexcused absence or fewer Tier 3: Access to Gaming Sites, Interactive Sites, and Sports sites; Addicting Games, ESPN, Sports Illustrated, Fan Fiction, Manga, and more • • • • • No F’s 5 missing assignments or less 4 RTC referrals or less 5 Tardies or less 2 unexcused absences or fewer Tier 2: Access to Entertainment sites and Streaming Music; Pandora, Spotify, and more • • • • 8 missing assignments or less 7 RTC referrals or less 7 Tardies or less 4 unexcused absences or less Tier 1: The Basics Google Drive, Kahoot, Socrative, Schooltube, and more • Everybody has access to this tier ISS/ OSS drops at least one tier 6 DISCIPLINE PROCEDURES It shall be at the discretion of the building principal and/or designees to increase/decrease the consequences issued to a student due to mitigating circumstances. The list of infractions includes, but is not limited to, what is printed below. State and federal laws may require additional penalties. STUDENT BEHAVIOR Angry/Arguing/Pushing Chronic violation of school rules Derogatory statements/Profanity/Gestures Destruction of property Disorderly conduct Failure to report to office False fire alarms Fighting Gang activity Harassment (verbal, physical, sexual) In hall without pass Inappropriate hall conduct DISCIPLINE ACTION RTC / ISS ISS/OSS RTC- OSS RTC/ISS/OSS-Police Intervention Parent Conference and OSS-Police Intervention RTC 2-10 OSS- Police Intervention 3-10 OSS-Police Intervention 3-10 OSS-Police Intervention Parent Conference and ISS or OSS- Police Intervention Structured Lunch RTC/Structured Lunch Insubordination/Uncooperative/Non-compliant Leaving school without permission Lunchroom Conduct ISS/OSS Parent Conference and ISS Removal from lunchroom & recess, ISS/OSS Lying Out of Bounds Racial/Ethnic Slurs Stealing/theft Threats/Assault Vandalism ATTENDANCE/TARDY Attendance Tardy to Class Tardy to School Truant from school or class CLASSROOM/HALLWAYS Cheating/Plagiarism Conduct/disrespect toward staff Conduct in classroom Conduct in an office detention Detention/ISS misconduct Open defiance NON-ESSENTIAL ITEMS Dangerous objects Not reporting dangerous objects or weapons Possession/use of fireworks Possession/use of illegal weapon/look alike weapon Possession of nuisance items Possession of tobacco Possession and/or under the influence of drugs/alcohol (or look alike drugs) Second offense possession and/or under the influence of drugs/alcohol Sale and/or distribution of drugs or look alike / drug paraphernalia CAMPUS/BUS BEHAVIOR Conduct on bus RTC RTC/ISS/loss of privileges 3-10 OSS 0-10 OSS-Police Intervention 3-10 OSS-Police Intervention 3-10 OSS-Police Intervention Conduct on campus Loitering Trespassing RTC/ISS/OSS Warning/RTC Police Intervention 6 unexcused absences County Attorney referral Structured Lunch 1-3 Warning, 4+, loss of privileges; Structured Lunch RTC / Referral to Truancy Officer Teacher action/parent conference/RTC RTC RTC ISS/OSS Parent Conference and/or 3-10 OSS Parent Contact and ISS/OSS 3-10 OSS, Police Intervention ISS/OSS 3-10 OSS, Police Intervention 3-10 OSS and or Expulsion, Police Intervention Confiscated and parent may claim/RTC 3-10 OSS, Police Intervention Follow Board Policy 502.7, Police intervention, 5 days OSS & referral to drug treatment, failure to comply - recommend expulsion Follow Board Policy 502.7, Police Intervention, OSS, recommend Expulsion Follow Board Policy 502.7, Police Intervention, OSS, recommend Expulsion Follow School Bus Policy 7 DRESS CODE / STUDENT APPEARANCE The students of the Burlington Community School District have great traditions. One of these traditions is that they dress and groom themselves in a fashion that is complimentary to the school and not distracting to other students. Your appearance sends a message to those around you; including any guests that may be visiting our school. This is your school, please show pride in it. The major responsibility for appropriate dress and grooming rests with the students and their parents. Students are expected to dress appropriately for school and all related school activities. A student’s dress may not constitute a threat to the health, safety, and welfare, or property of others, must be in accordance with the public decency and civil statutes, and must not disrupt the orderly, disciplined atmosphere of the school. Students will be asked to correct the inappropriate clothing or inappropriate decorative items in their lockers. The administration retains the right to define the terms of good taste, common sense, neatness, cleanliness, and school approved safe apparel. This includes but is not limited to: Coats, hats, caps, scarves, and bandanas should not be worn in the building. Clothing that fails to sufficiently cover i.e. halter-style tops, short skirts, spaghetti straps, backless or strapless attire, bare midriff, A-shirts (a sleeveless shirt made of the fabric that was once used for men’s underwear). No short shorts or micro minis, shorts and skirts must have a 4” inseam or be fingertip length. Thin t-shirts worn over colored undergarments. Pants should be worn at the waist with no undergarments showing, no sagging. Clothing and/or jewelry that is negative towards the school or school district or promotes the use of alcohol or drugs, is profane, racially biased, or offensive in language/pictures, relates to gang activity or colors or includes sexually inappropriate references may not be worn at school, school activities, or used as decorative items in lockers. Wallet chains, spiked dog collar items, or other inappropriate items of jewelry are not permitted. Students are required to wear shoes or sandals. (no house slippers) Coats, backpacks, and bags are to be stored in the student lockers during school hours. PJ pants: thin cotton, flannel or fuzzy fleece pants typically worn as pajamas. Leggings, tights, spandex pants, jeggings, yoga pants may only be worn with shorts or skirts. 8 Dear Parent or Guardian: Date: __________________ This letter is to inform you that ______________________________________ was wearing clothing that does not meet our dress code as indicated below. (copy of dress code on back of letter). Was wearing clothing that fails to sufficiently cover ie. halter-style tops, short skirts, spaghetti straps, backless or strapless attire, bare midriff, A-shirts Was wearing short shorts or micro minis (Shorts and skirts must be fingertip in length) Was wearing clothing that showed undergarments Was wearing clothing that is negative towards the school or school district or promotes the use of alcohol or drugs, is profane, racially biased, or offensive in language/pictures, relates to gang activity or colors or includes sexually inappropriate Was wearing PJ pants: thin cotton, flannel or fuzzy fleece pants typically worn as pajamas Was wearing leggings, tights, spandex pants, jeggings, and yoga pants (may only be worn with appropriate length shorts or skirts) Other: ______________________________________________________________________________ This letter is to communicate the first offense to the dress code and also inform you what will happen if this violation of the dress code happens again. 1st offense - This letter must be signed and returned the next day to the office. If the letter is not brought back signed a parent phone call will be made. If the letter is not signed or a parent cannot be contacted a structured lunch will be assigned. 2nd offense – (1) The student will be given the opportunity to call home to have appropriate clothing brought to school. (2) The student will have the opportunity to get clothing from their locker to change into. (3) If appropriate clothing cannot be obtained, clean clothes, such as school sweat pants, will be offered. (4) If the student chooses not to address the dress code violation, they will be assigned to ISS or RTC room until the end of the day. 3rd offense – Same as 2nd offence 4th offense – 1 day of ISS Please contact a school administrator if you have any questions. ___________________________________________ ______________ Parent Signature Date 9 MAP OF EDWARD STONE MIDDLE SCHOOL, HOME OF THE JETS! 10 MAP OF ALDO LEOPOLD MIDDLE SCHOOL, HOME OF THE WOLVES! 11 12 13 14 15