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Healthy School Culture Sessions 23A & 23B Donna Betzer Wanda Bush

Healthy School Culture Sessions 23A & 23B Donna Betzer Wanda Bush. The Culture Dynamic. “Houston, we have a problem…”. The NASA Tiger Team. The Space Shuttles Challenger and Columbia. NASA Culture Leads to Disasters.

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Healthy School Culture Sessions 23A & 23B Donna Betzer Wanda Bush

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  1. Healthy School CultureSessions 23A & 23BDonna BetzerWanda Bush

  2. The Culture Dynamic

  3. “Houston, we have a problem…”

  4. The NASA Tiger Team

  5. The Space Shuttles Challenger and Columbia

  6. NASA Culture Leads to Disasters • Investigative board says difficult culture within NASA real cause of disasters … • Arrogance • Fear of retribution • Communication problems • Strained relationships • Boston College sociologist Diane Vaughan called the decisions made within NASA “institutional failure,” citing organizational and cultural changes that should have been fixed after Challenger.

  7. Every organization has a culture. . .

  8. The question is –does it hinder or support what you do?

  9. Healthy Lifestyle Choicesand Culture Change Programming

  10. The HLC Mission To empower children with the knowledge and skills to make healthy lifestyle choices and avoid risk behaviors.

  11. What We Do Comprehensive risk-behavior prevention programming • Conflict Resolution/Violence Prevention • Substance Abuse Prevention • Obesity Prevention (nutrition & fitness) • Safety • School-wide Culture Program

  12. How We Do It Research-based curriculum and reinforcing programming • (1) 45-minute lesson per week • Pre-K through 6th grade • Aligned with all standards and benchmarks and GLE’s • Optional reinforcing experiences (parent workshops, games, TV messages) • HLC Healthy School Culture Program

  13. HLC Healthy School Culture Program • Developed in collaboration with Southwest Airlines to bring their successful corporate culture training to schools • Goal is to give school faculty, staff and leadership the tools to change the school environment into a place where professionals want to work, and where children love to learn • (1) 3-hour training session empowers schools to simplify behavioral expectations, and develop a system to recognize and reward positive behaviors

  14. Why emphasize culture change? In pre and post culture surveys administered over a two-year period at six schools, teachers reported improvements in 25 of 28 culture indicators including double digit increases in 19 of 28 items

  15. Biggest gains • Clarity regarding acceptable behaviors (+29.2%) • Teachers who do not have to yell to get students attention (+27.5%) • Students who appear happy to be at school every day (+23.3%) • Quality of student to staff relationships (+21.6%) • Quality of parent to staff relationships (+20.3%)

  16. Healthy behaviors translate to the home • 84% made positive changes in their eating habits • 71% were making safer choices in and around the home • 69% were exercising more • 51% had improved their relationships with friends and family

  17. Program Goals • INCLUDES traditional PBS goals • Define behavioral expectations • Teach behavioral expectations • Acknowledge appropriate behaviors • Correct behavioral errors

  18. Unique Goals • Entire staff role-models positive behaviors • Begin peer to peer, transfer to students • Promotes collaboration, supportive work environment • Encourages expressions of praise, appreciation for peers • Includes parental involvement strategies

  19. Before you begin… • Pre-culture survey to assess: • Physical environment (Warm/welcoming, noisy, safe, clean) • Staff dynamics (Happy to come to work? Respected/? Valued? Sense of cooperation?) • Staff/student interactions (Do we approach children as customers? Look for the best in kids? Respect them? Administer consistent discipline?) • Healthy Role-modeling (Healthy food served? Healthy food sold? Lunch room offers most nutritious selections possible? Adequate recess play activities? P.E.?) • Communication (Written mission statement or values? Behavioral expectations/rules understood by all?)

  20. 5 Steps to a Healthy Culture Step 1: Define Values Step 2: Define behavioral expectations Step 3: I.D. Artifacts, Celebrations and Rewards Step 4: Live It: Form a Culture Committee Step 5: Hire the right people

  21. VIDEO CLIP: “It’s So Simple”

  22. Step 1: Define Your Values Are deep-seated beliefs about the world and how it operates. They are emotional rules that govern our behavior and attitudes.

  23. Object of the game: Keep 6 cards that reflect your personal values.

  24. Behaviors Intentions Values

  25. Intentions Values Others judge us by our behaviors . . . We justify our behaviors by our intentions. Behaviors

  26. Step 2: Define Behavioral Expectations Everyone has responsibilities in contributing to a healthy school culture. Each school should define behavioral expectations for staff, students and parents. (PBS foundation)

  27. Staff Members are role models of positive behavior. They reflect school values in all they do. They speak and act toward peers, students and parents in a positive, encouraging way. They treat others the way they’d want to be treated.

  28. Students should approach staff members with a positive attitude and respect. They should communicate and behave in ways that reflect a healthy school culture.

  29. Students Live the Culture • Respect for teachers and school staff members • Respect for fellow students • Praise and support each other • Encourage and help each other • Remind each other about classroom rules and assist in resolving conflict • Welcome new students into the classroom • Participate in ritual activities that celebrate positive behaviors in the classroom (like a classroom meeting or circle time)

  30. Parental involvement strategies • Host some parent-teacher meetings that are SOCIAL gatherings, to get to know one another • Create a parent resource center within the library that can loan books or videos to parents • Be creative in identifying volunteer opportunities • Post “volunteer wanted” signs near the office or in parent newsletters; include the job description so they understand needs • Experiment with having students lead parent-teacher conferences or parenting nights in order to boost participation • Ask other teachers, librarians, cafeteria workers what type of help they need

  31. So, now what? • Simplify rules and behavioral expectations for staff and students • Keep them positive • Make them KNOWN

  32. Step 3: Artifacts Celebrations Rewards

  33. Artifacts Visible, physical evidence of your school culture.

  34. Examples: • Morning announcements • Music – set mood • Photos • Student Art on display • Bulletin Boards • News clippings • Letters of praise/support • Cards • Themed Weeks/decorations • Parent newsletters • School signs

  35. HLC Artifacts: • Post Classroom activities in hallways • Post behavior and safety rules/signs throughout school • Post hand washing reminders in bathrooms • Use Team Turtle Characters throughout facility to reinforce healthy choices

  36. Behavioral Artifacts: • Role model healthy habits • Include healthy choices as part of fundraisers • Offer low-fat, low-sugar choices for breakfast and lunch • Offer physically active activities for kids before school, at recess and after school • Host smoking cessation and other wellness classes for faculty • Start an aerobics club for faculty after school

  37. SOUTHWEST ARTIFACTS

  38. Celebrations Honor the individuals, groups, significant events and important accomplishments through creative, festive and outrageous ways. They make the spirit of an organization visible and remind people what’s important.

  39. Why celebrations are important: • Build relationships • Provide sense of history • Recognize major milestones • Inspires, motivates and reenergizes people • Reduces stress • Build self-confidence and removes fear • Helps people mourn loss associated with change

  40. Celebration guidelines: • The celebration must be . . . • Authentic • Raise people’s dignity • Appeal to all senses • Seen as an investment not cost • Cost-effective • Done right

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