Restraint and seclusion, outdated crisis management techniques that are commonly used in schools across the nation and beyond, are disproportionately used on disabled and minority children. These interventions are dangerous and can lead to significant trauma and injuries to students, teachers, and staff. Some children have even died as a result of the use of restraint and seclusion. There are far better ways to work with children that avoid the need for crisis management. Our schools should be moving towards neurodevelopmentally informed, trauma-sensitive, biologically respectful, relationship-based ways of understanding and supporting students.
Our mission is to inform changes in policy and practice to reduce and eliminate the use of punitive discipline and outdated behavioral management approaches and end the school-to-prison pipeline.
Shared 55 years ago
3 views
Shared 55 years ago
6 views
Shared 55 years ago
6 views
Shared 55 years ago
5 views
Shared 55 years ago
69 views
Shared 55 years ago
21 views
Shared 55 years ago
3 views
Shared 55 years ago
13 views
Shared 55 years ago
3 views
Shared 55 years ago
20 views
Shared 55 years ago
18 views
Shared 55 years ago
655 views
Shared 55 years ago
567 views
Shared 55 years ago
25 views
Shared 55 years ago
537 views
Shared 55 years ago
33 views
Shared 55 years ago
435 views
Shared 55 years ago
481 views
Shared 55 years ago
165 views
Shared 55 years ago
461 views
Shared 55 years ago
213 views
Shared 55 years ago
446 views
Shared 55 years ago
481 views
Shared 55 years ago
452 views
Shared 55 years ago
460 views
Shared 55 years ago
109 views
Shared 55 years ago
51 views
Shared 55 years ago
424 views
Shared 55 years ago
54 views
Shared 55 years ago
57 views
Shared 55 years ago
128 views
Shared 55 years ago
77 views