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We recognize students’ positives actions and choices. A simple statement like, “I see Jane focusing,” goes a long way with kids. We want to energize positive choices. We constantly recognize all that they are doing that is right, healthy, and life-giving. We don’t want to energize negative choices. Poor choices result in simple resets. If their poor choices affect others, then students have natural consequences and are taught how to fix their broken relationships.
Though the school has used traditional scores based on rubrics for our upper school students because grades are needed for college entrance, a different system of authentic feedback has been used after the 2017/18 school year. This system meets the need for entrance into secondary schooling while being true to our philosophy.
Our teachers measure outcomes through:
Restoring Community: As happens in life, relationships are broken when persons make poor choices or practice poor habits, and those persons need to be held accountable. Instead of just using punishment, we hold them accountable with natural consequences AND we support them through restoration.
Visit this website to learn more: https://www.iirp.edu/
In addition to Restorative Practices, we use an additional method, the Nurtured Heart Approach, to hold our more challenging students accountable and to support their inner greatness. Developed by Howard Glasser, this three-pronged approach deemphasizes negative choices, recognizes positive choices, and sets clear limits and immediate consequences (such as a “reset”) when rules are broken.
Click here to listen to Howard Glasser as he explains this groundbreaking approach.
Gillingham works hard to build trust and community. Just as students participate in check-in circles, community building activities, and restorative circles, so do the faculty and staff. We work and play together. We find solutions together. We speak to one another when conflict arises. We model respect for each other in front of the students.