Issue 35
June 25, 2019
Using Restorative Practices in the Truancy Court Program
By Arion Alston, Truancy Court Program Mentor

For the past two school years, the University of Baltimore School of Law Sayra and Neil Meyerhoff Center for Families, Children and the Courts (CFCC) has focused on incorporating restorative practices into its Truancy Court Program (TCP). The result has been more active student engagement in the TCP. 
Benefits of Restorative Practices 

Restorative practice is a social science that contains elements rooted in behaviors of indigenous cultures all over the world, from Native American to African, Asian, Celtic, Hebrew, Arab and many others. Its purpose is to build healthy communities, increase social capital, decrease crime and antisocial behavior, repair harm and restore relationships. It correlates with research in education, psychology, social work and criminology.
 
In the criminal justice field, for example, restorative circles and restorative conferences allow victims, offenders and their family members and friends to come together to explore how everyone has been affected by an offense and, when possible, to decide how to repair the harm and meet their own needs. In education, circles provide opportunities for students to share their feelings, build relationships and solve problems, and, when there is wrongdoing, to play an active role in addressing the wrong and making things right. The operational dynamic of restorative practice circles is based on the "5 Rs." They are: relationship, respect, responsibility, repair and re-integration
 
Using restorative practices can reduce bullying, restore relationships, repair harm and provide students with an opportunity to express themselves without fear of reproach. The TCP has systematically implemented restorative practice into its mentoring component with an emphasis on the restorative circle. The circle process allows students to tell their stories and offer their own perspectives.
 
How We Incorporated Restorative Practices into the TCP

Building on the momentum of the increased use and visibility of restorative practices both across the nation and in Baltimore City Public Schools, the TCP Team began using restorative practices as part of regular roundtable discussions with TCP students. We restructured these sessions into a series of modules that incrementally introduced elements of restorative practices.
  
The classes begin with an introduction to circle work, the various types of circles and the philosophical and ethical precepts behind restorative practices. Students review the basic principles of restorative practice, including how this approach is an alternative to harsh disciplinary practices, such as detention, suspension and expulsion. Students are often surprised to learn that they will likely be involved in a restorative circle at some point in their school career, either as a witness, victim, offender or some other stakeholder in an incident or event. After students gain familiarity with the behavioral expectations of circle work, we engage the students in practice scenarios that require a restorative circle session.
  
This school year, we used scenarios such as "The Truant Student," "The Class Clown," "Cyber Bullying" and "The Internet Dating Hoax" to teach students about restorative practices. After they read a short description of the scenario and become familiar with the underlying facts and characters, the students cast themselves in the various roles outlined in the scenario, which they act out in circle time.
  
For example, "The Internet Dating Hoax" involves a 15-year-old female student who receives an invitation to meet a popular boy after school for ice cream. Her feelings are hurt when the boy does not show up. Upset and embarrassed, the girl begins to skip school. We learn that the boy never invited the girl. Instead, three of the girl's female classmates sent the invitation as a prank because they are jealous of her popularity.

In addition to the 15-year-old girl, other characters include: the victim's parents, the boy and the three girls who perpetrated the hoax. A school administrator is the circle facilitator. Depending on the number of students attending the session, the role of a counselor could also be cast, as well as friends of the perpetrators and victim, who may want to offer support. The students do not receive a script; instead, they improvise their roles based on their character's description in the written scenario. Working through the scenario, students learn about the dynamics of a restorative practice circle, while having fun playing their assigned roles.
  
 
Arion Alston facilitates a restorative practices circle.
  
After practicing with several pre-written scenarios, the next step is to have students identify real-life situations that might have created conflict for them. These student-identified scenarios show students how they can resolve conflict using a restorative circle. Using fact-based scenarios from the students, situations involving family members or friends are presented to the circle. For example, students often suggest experiences where they got into disagreements with their parents or caregivers. This development allows the program to not only extend its instruction of restorative practices, but it also assists students by showing them how they can resolve issues involving other students, siblings and/or parents or guardians. These conflicts often manifest as difficulties at school that impact academic performance, behavioral issues and/or attendance. Although students are asked to provide scenarios voluntarily, they are never required to participate.
 
Expanding to Parents, Faculty, and Staff

Since its inception in 2005, the TCP has had a mentoring component at the heart of its programming. The original mentoring program was designed and taught by Anthony "Bubba" Green, the TCP's first Mentor. Mr. Green's character-building classes were infused with many of the principles of restorative practices promoted today.
  
This past school year, with funding from  Open Society Institute-Baltimore, we were able to expand our restorative practices curriculum at Frederick Douglass High School to include workshops for parents, faculty and staff. Frederick Douglass High School students face significant trauma and violence in their lives. This school year, a video went viral that captured a student striking a teacher. Additionally, a staff member was shot by a student's relative inside the school during school hours. After both events, the TCP Team facilitated restorative circles during the weekly sessions. Restorative circles provided a vehicle through which students could express how traumatic these events were for them and discuss ways to move forward.
  
By showing students how restorative practices can be used to resolve conflict and address trauma, we are teaching them skills that they can use outside the classroom, in their homes and in the community.

2018-2019 Truancy Court Program Wrap-Up
  
CFCC's Truancy Court Program operated in five Baltimore City public schools during the 2018-2019 school year: Furley Elementary School, Mt. Royal Elementary/Middle School, the Baltimore Design School (middle/high), REACH! Partnership High School, and Frederick Douglass High School. The TCP wrapped up the Spring session with graduations at all five schools. Students "graduate" if they demonstrate a 65% reduction in absences and/or tardies during the TCP program, when compared against their attendance in the prior two quarters. Additionally, the TCP Judge, in consultation with the TCP Team, may "graduate" a student based on significantly improved attendance, grades, and class participation, even if the student falls short of the 65% threshold.
  • During the 2018-2019 school year, the TCP served 169 students: 86 students in the Fall 2018 session and 83 students in the Spring 2019 session.
     
  • Seventy six percent of the students who participated in the TCP graduated from the program. Sixty-six students (77%) of the 86 enrolled in the Fall 2018 session graduated, and 62 students (75%) of the 83 students enrolled in the Spring 2019 session graduated.
     
  • All 169 students received: one-on-one weekly conversations with a judge, mentoring, parent outreach, case management services and resource referrals, as needed.
     
  • The TCP Mentor provided weekly restorative circles for all of the TCP students.
     
  • One hundred nineteen students benefited from tutoring provided by volunteers from the University of Baltimore community.

Do You Want to Change a Young Person's Life?

 

Magistrate (ret) Joyce Mitchell

with a graduating student

CFCC's Truancy Court Program gives struggling students the support, tools and confidence they need to succeed in school. You can implement this effective truancy reduction program in your schools, too. The Truancy Court Program Toolkit, Second Edition, shows you how. Click here for a sneak peek at the Table of Contents and ordering form.

About CFCC

The Sayra and Neil Meyerhoff Center for Families, Children and the Courts promotes policies and practices that unite families, communities and the justice system to improve the lives of children and families and the health of communities. CFCC advocates the use of therapeutic jurisprudence, the understanding that the legal system has an effect on behavior, emotions and mental health.

Barbara A. Babb is the Associate Professor of Law at the University of Baltimore School of Law; Founder and Director of Sayra and Neil Meyerhoff Center for Families, Children and the Courts (CFCC); Director of the Post-J.D. Certificate in Family Law program at the University of Baltimore School of Law; and Editor-in-Chief of the Family Court Review. 

CFCC Staff and Contributors: Rebecca Stahl, Deputy Director; Michele Hong-Polansky, Program Manager; Arion Alston, Truancy Court Program Mentor;  Spencer Hall, Truancy Court Program Coordinator; Eileen Canfield, Truancy Court Program Social Worker; Katie Davis, Truancy Court Program Attorney; Katrice Williams, Program Administrative Specialist.