Login or Register to add to your saved resources. On moving up to secondary school, one of the biggest worries for many children is getting used to a new, stricter approach to discipline. Gone are the days when missing playtime was the ultimate threat; now, they have to get used to a world of after-school detentions, isolation and even exclusion. Secondary school behaviour policies Every school has to publish a behaviour policy, which clearly states the rules of conduct for pupils not just during the school day, but before and after, too.
It should also set out how the school will deal with bullying. The head also decides what will happen if the rules are broken. The rules must: Promote good behaviour, discipline and respect. Prevent bullying. Ensure that pupils complete the work they are set. Download Your Free Packs Today.
Teachers also have the power to discipline children outside of school, for example on the way to or from school, or on trips.
What sort of discipline is allowed? Schools will usually have a scale of discipline, with lesser sanctions for minor incidents through to major punishments for the most serious, such as physical violence, drug offences or persistent bullying.
Detention Detention is a commonly used punishment in secondary schools. Out-of-school detentions can be given on any school day, at weekends except the weekend immediately before or after a school holiday and on INSET days. To help us improve GOV. It will take only 2 minutes to fill in. Cookies on GOV. UK We use some essential cookies to make this website work. Accept additional cookies Reject additional cookies View cookies.
Hide this message. Home Childcare and parenting Schools and education. School discipline and exclusions. Discipline School behaviour policy Every school has a behaviour policy, which lists the rules of conduct for pupils before and after school as well as during the school day. This means there can be consequences for continued low level disruption.
Tracking missed detentions is easily taken care of with our Upscale feature. Any detention marked as unattended without valid reason goes back into the Detentions Manager at the next highest level. This means that staff no longer have to update records manually — reducing the chance of mistakes. Share details of detentions with pupils and parents to keep everyone informed. Pupils will have a record of where they are expected to sit their detentions while parents get the whole picture as to how their child is behaving in school.
Create bespoke and detailed detention reports within Class Charts Analytics. Track pupils, groups and more, discover where the pinch-points are and even how much time pupils pupils owe in missed detentions. Detentions allows you to issue, share and track detentions set by staff.
An extension of the Class Charts Behaviour module. Issued detentions feed into both pupil and parent accounts A dedicated detentions section in Analytics. Flexible and bespoke detentions to match your schools policy.
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