Teacher Perceptions of School Discipline| A Critical Interrogation of a Merit and Demerit Discipline System

<p> Schools are seeking to understand how to build positive school environments that help students learn and become good citizens in the school community. One practice used in charter schools is merit and demerit systems. The literature indicates that positive and negative reinforcements acts...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Licea, Evelyn
Language:EN
Published: Loyola Marymount University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10157597
id ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-10157597
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-101575972016-11-11T04:00:54Z Teacher Perceptions of School Discipline| A Critical Interrogation of a Merit and Demerit Discipline System Licea, Evelyn Pedagogy|Secondary education <p> Schools are seeking to understand how to build positive school environments that help students learn and become good citizens in the school community. One practice used in charter schools is merit and demerit systems. The literature indicates that positive and negative reinforcements acts as punitive discipline that only works when adults are around students to enforce policies, rules, and expectations. One particular charter high school that used a merit and demerit system to discipline students was studied to understand the implications of such systems for students of color living in a low-income community. Using the principles of critical pedagogy, the study connected and drew inferences between teacher perceptions of discipline and how the merit and demerit system impacted student referral and punishment. A total of 12 teachers (ninth and 10th grade) participated in this qualitative study. Through classroom observations and focus groups, trends were triangulated and presented in this study. A major finding of this study involves the teacher understanding that the concept of a merit and demerit system is beneficial, but ultimately leads to a loss of student agency. The discussion focuses on explaining an authoritarianperspective and the perceptions and reality of the implementing a merit and demerit system at the high school level. Implications for educators to understand and improve school discipline policies that support students and rethink punitive and authoritarian practices are discussed. Recommendations for future research in the study are presented and summarized.</p> Loyola Marymount University 2016-11-09 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10157597 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Pedagogy|Secondary education
spellingShingle Pedagogy|Secondary education
Licea, Evelyn
Teacher Perceptions of School Discipline| A Critical Interrogation of a Merit and Demerit Discipline System
description <p> Schools are seeking to understand how to build positive school environments that help students learn and become good citizens in the school community. One practice used in charter schools is merit and demerit systems. The literature indicates that positive and negative reinforcements acts as punitive discipline that only works when adults are around students to enforce policies, rules, and expectations. One particular charter high school that used a merit and demerit system to discipline students was studied to understand the implications of such systems for students of color living in a low-income community. Using the principles of critical pedagogy, the study connected and drew inferences between teacher perceptions of discipline and how the merit and demerit system impacted student referral and punishment. A total of 12 teachers (ninth and 10th grade) participated in this qualitative study. Through classroom observations and focus groups, trends were triangulated and presented in this study. A major finding of this study involves the teacher understanding that the concept of a merit and demerit system is beneficial, but ultimately leads to a loss of student agency. The discussion focuses on explaining an authoritarianperspective and the perceptions and reality of the implementing a merit and demerit system at the high school level. Implications for educators to understand and improve school discipline policies that support students and rethink punitive and authoritarian practices are discussed. Recommendations for future research in the study are presented and summarized.</p>
author Licea, Evelyn
author_facet Licea, Evelyn
author_sort Licea, Evelyn
title Teacher Perceptions of School Discipline| A Critical Interrogation of a Merit and Demerit Discipline System
title_short Teacher Perceptions of School Discipline| A Critical Interrogation of a Merit and Demerit Discipline System
title_full Teacher Perceptions of School Discipline| A Critical Interrogation of a Merit and Demerit Discipline System
title_fullStr Teacher Perceptions of School Discipline| A Critical Interrogation of a Merit and Demerit Discipline System
title_full_unstemmed Teacher Perceptions of School Discipline| A Critical Interrogation of a Merit and Demerit Discipline System
title_sort teacher perceptions of school discipline| a critical interrogation of a merit and demerit discipline system
publisher Loyola Marymount University
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10157597
work_keys_str_mv AT liceaevelyn teacherperceptionsofschooldisciplineacriticalinterrogationofameritanddemeritdisciplinesystem
_version_ 1718392339082248192