Wraparound Replication Cookbook: Recipes for Creating Strong School Culture and Addressing Social Emotional Barriers to Learning

This cookbook is the result of the Massachusetts Wraparound Zone Initiative - an initiative aimed at helping schools tackle both academic and non-academic barriers to student learning.  A rigorous evaluation of the Massachusetts Wraparound Zone Initiative (5 districts, 30 schools) conducted by the American Institutes of Research found that wraparound strategies made a significant contribution to improved student outcomes, particularly those related to student behavior, student support, and family engagement. This handbook represents the best thinking and strategy "recipes" on how to support the social emotional aspects of learning:

  • Addressing school culture and the social emotional aspects of learning

  • Rethinking systems for holistically identifying and addressing student academic and social emotional needs

  • Creating focused partnerships and coalitions

  • Treating parents as full partners

  • Big district and state takeaways

  • How to get started and how to manage priorities coherently

  • Profiles of six districts and the strategies they used

  • Links to resources, tools, templates and more

Resource Links

Wraparound Zone Cookbook

Individual Recipes

  1. Doing a Welcoming School Walkthrough

  2. Creating a School Culture Team

  3. Rethinking Recess

  4. Students as Culture Builders

  5. Assessing Student Strengths & Needs

  6. Student Success Teams (Student Support Teams, Child Study Teams, Whole Child Support Teams)

  7. Mobilizing around a Tiered System of Supports Framework

  8. Tracking Student Support

  9. Mapping Your Resources

  10. Creating Deep Wraparound Partnerships

  11. Managing Partnership Development at Your School

  12. Organizing as a Coalition of Partners

  13. Academic Parent Teacher Teams

  14. Parent House Parties | Academic Support Parties

  15. Rethinking Parent Academies and Cafes: Pooling Community Resources

Wraparound Video Series - hear Mass educators, students, staff, parents and partners highlight their strategies and the impact

Source

Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education and School & Main Institute

Safe and Supportive Schools Self-Reflection Tool

Multi-Tiered System of Support Leadership Institute Poster.

Welcome to the revised Safe and Supportive Schools Implementation Guide & Self-Reflection Tool. The goal of the self-reflection Tool is to catalyze a reflective and creative inquiry-based, year-long or multi-year process to create and enhance a school`s work to become more safe and supportive for the entire school community (including but not limited to: students, staff, families, and community partners). This tool is intended to assist with documenting current practices that support students` behavioral health ranging from the whole school community to individual students that require more intensive supports. It also examines the role of various school professionals and staff in providing these supports. This process enables schools to identify their most pressing local priorities and create action plans that can be incorporated into School Improvement Plans to address these priorities. It may be helpful to revisit your school`s responses to this tool on a regular (e.g., quarterly, annual) basis to review progress and continually work towards full implementation on a range of practices that address and remove the barriers to learning.

Resources

Safe and Supportive Schools Self-Reflection Tool

Source

Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education

The School Climate Survey Suite

Cover page of the School climate survey suite document.

The School Climate Survey Suite is a set of four multidimensional surveys to measure student, teacher, administrator, faculty, and family perceptions of school climate. The surveys are brief, reliable, and valid for assessing perceived school climate among students in Grades 3-12. Teams can use each survey separately or in combination to assess perceptions. Each survey includes a set of demographic questions about the participant and a number of questions related to school climate with Likert-scale response option.

Resource Links

School Climate Survey Suite

Source

OSEP Technical Assistance Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports, University of Oregon

 

Parent and Educator Guide to School Climate Resources

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Produced jointly by the Department’s Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (OESE) and Office for Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (OSERS), this guide provides best practices and resources that parents and educators can utilize as they work to achieve a positive school climate, lower disciplinary issues, and enhance school safety.

Resource Links

Parent and Educator Guide to School Climate Resources

Source

United States Department of Education Office of Elementary and Secondary Education

 

National Center for Safe Supportive Learning Environments Website Resources

The National Center on Safe Supportive Learning Environments (NCSSLE) is a training and technical assistance (TTA) center funded by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Safe and Healthy Students to help address the many factors that result in disciplinary problems and affect conditions for learning, such as bullying, harassment, violence, and substance abuse. Due to the growing concern over school climate and disproportionate rates of suspensions and expulsions in the nation’s schools, over the past few years, NCSSLE has developed a number of materials related to this topic. Additionally, NCSSLE has increased the number of resources housed in the NCSSLE website to help school districts better address their approaches to school climate and discipline while safeguarding student’s civil rights.       

Resource Links

Source

National Center for Safe Supportive Learning Environments

Navigating Social and Emotional Learning from the Inside Out - Guide to 25 Evidence-Based SEL Programs for Elementary

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There are many social emotional learning programs out there. This report provides a comprehensive report on 25 evidence-based social emotional learning programs for elementary school. Developed for the Wallace Foundation and released in March 2017, the report profiles both lesson-based/curriculum and non-curricular approaches.

Resource Link

Navigating SEL from the Inside Out:  Looking Inside & Across 25 Leading SEL Programs

SEL Programs Evaluated

In-School, Lesson-Based Curricula: The 4Rs Program, Caring School Community, Character First, Competent Kids, Caring Communities, I Can Problem Solve, Lions Quest, The Mutt-i-grees Curriculum, Open Circle, The PATHS Program, Positive Action , RULER, Second Step, SECURe, Social Decision Making/Problem Solving Program, Too Good for Violence, We Have Skills, Wise Skills

In-School, Non-curricular Approaches:  Conscious Discipline, Good Behavior Game, Playworks, Responsive Classroom, Program Profiles

Out-of-School Time Programs:  Before the Bullying, A.F.T.E.R School Program, Girls on the Run, WINGS for Kids

Source

The Wallace Foundation, Harvard Graduate School of Education

Innovating to Support Student Success: P.K. Yonge School Case Study

Learn how the P.K. Yonge School in Florida structured its tiered systems of support approach.  The case study includes information on how "Student Success Teams" are organized and run, how "tiering" is done, and how the staff take an integrated view of academic and social emotional or behavioral support needs. 

Resource Links

Source

Edutopia

A Climate for Academic Success: How School Climate Distinguished Schools that are Beating the Achievement Odds

This research study explores the climate of a handful of secondary schools with extraordinary success compared to other schools, including those that consistently under-perform.  A growing body of research suggests that school climate may be an important variable in explaining why some schools are more successful than others.  Learn about how these school's focused on climate and experienced overall improvement. 

Resource Link

A Climate for Academic Success

Source

California Comprehensive Center

Student School Climate Leadership Teams

School Climate through Students' Eyes

A lot of school climate and culture is "what's happening when adults are busy doing other things."  Use these resources from the Center on School Climate & Learning to involve a variety of students (not just natural or known leaders) in gathering student voice and pinpointing aspects of school climate/culture that need work and strategies for addressing them.

Resource Links

Source

The Center for School Climate and Learning

Academic Parent Teacher Teams (APTT) Model

Academic Parent Teacher Team

Learn how to shift from traditional parent-teacher open house and curriculum nights to teacher-facilitated sessions designed to help parents support their child's academic success:  Academic Parent-Teacher Teams (APTT).

Resource Links

Sources

Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, School & Main Institute, Edutopia