Monday 13 July 2015

PB4L School Wide (with a Restorative Practice slant)

 This was written for my Restorative Practice paper so it has that slant 

A description of Positive Behaviour for Learning School Wide
In society academic underachievement and poor prosocial skills among our young people is (or should be) a concern for everyone.  As schools are developmental institutions (Hopkins, 2007) they are the ideal places to grow our young people and increase their life chances by working with them to create safe and peaceful learning environments (Feinberg, Handler, Putnam & Luiselli, 2005; Warren, Bohanon-Edmonson, Turnbull, Sailor, Wickham, Griggs, & Beech, 2006).
In New Zealand the Taumata Whanonga behaviour summit was held in 2009 to address concerns such as violence and bullying that were creating unsafe learning environments in some schools and were stopping teachers from teaching (Feinberg et al., 2005; MoE, n.d.; Warren et al., 2006) The summit firstly acknowledged that the traditional systems of laying down the rules and then using sanctions to impose them (Hopkins, 2007) were not working and discussed other methods (MoE, n.d.).  Secondly, the Ministry of Education introduced their action plan: Positive Behaviour for Learning (PB4L) which focuses on both students’ behaviour and their learning simultaneously (ERO, 2011).

One of the current ten initiatives of PB4L is PB4L School Wide (PB4LSW) which was initially developed in the United States as Positive Behavioural Interventions and Supports (PBIS) (MoE, n.d.).  At the foundation of PBIS is social and cognitive learning theory (Boyd, Dingle, Herdina, New Zealand Council for Educational Research & New Zealand Ministry of Education, 2014).  This states that people do not learn new behaviours solely by trying them and either succeeding or failing; they need to observe the behaviour rewarded and then she or he may replicate the behaviour model if they choose to (Bandura as cited in Palmer, 2012).  Using this theory individual schools have to reconstruct their discipline systems by defining, teaching and acknowledging (through extrinsic rewards) school-wide expectations while having consistent consequences for violations of the rules (Feuerborn, Tyre, & King, 2015). 

PBIS was chosen by the NZ Government to assist our schools to “build a culture where positive behaviour and learning is a way of life” by “changing the environment, systems and practices” to support young people to make positive behaviour choices (MoE, n.d.).  At the same time it appeases the current managerial climate where facts and figures are considered so vital (Thrupp & Hursh, 2006) by collecting and analysing data (Feinberg et al., 2005). In NZ PBIS was rebranded into PB4LSW and from 2010 was offered to all (both State and Integrated) Primary, Intermediate and Secondary Schools as a framework, with financial support of $10,000 a year for 3 years, to build a contextually consistent and positive school-wide learning environment (Boyd et al., 2014; Muscot, Mann & Lebron, 2008).  It is designed to suit all schools whether they have perceived behaviour issues or not and even complement those who already have Restorative Justice Practice (RJP) culture at their heart by building systems for staff to follow (MoH, n.d.).  However, PB4LSW is not mandatory in NZ’s educational system and some schools may believe that they already have effective behaviour plans in place (Boyd et al., 2014; Muscot et al., 2008) or just don’t want to join. 

If a school does decide to participate they have to move through three separate tiers to ensure the customs and values of the new PB4LSW culture foster success for all (MoE, 2012).  For it to be implemented effectively and sustained (McIntosh, MacKay, Hume, Doolittle, Vincent, Horner & Ervin 2011) there may need to be a substantial change (in some cases) of teachers’ practices (Feuerborn et al., 2015) so there has to be an 80% staff commitment.  Only then can the school begin the Tier 1 journey of targeting 80% of students by actively teaching positive behaviour while reinforcing its expectations and using consistent consequences.  Once this is in place schools can move into Tier 2 where they develop targeted interventions for small groups of vulnerable students and after this Tier 3, which develops specialised interventions for individuals who need additional support (Boyd et al., 2014).

The 2014 Preliminary evaluation (Boyd et al., 2014) indicated that PB4LSW is improving school culture through an increase in consistent approaches to behaviour. However, socio-economic status maybe an issue as it is faster to implement in deciles 5-8 than lower decile schools (Boyd et al., 2014). This maybe to do with the “messy details” associated with some students from lower decile schools (Thrupp & Lupton, 2006) which can make the behaviour of a young person more complex and its management by the school more challenging.  On a positive note, in lower decile schools, there appears to be more consultative approaches with staff, greater shifts in student outcomes and PB4LSW is usually further embedded across the school (Boyd et al., 2014).  In relation to the different sectors (Primary, Intermediate and Secondary) Secondary/Intermediate coaches tended to report more change to student behaviour and Primary coaches to school culture and systems. Generally, the PB4LSW journey was more complex for Intermediate and High schools, probably due to their size, and there was a wider gap between existing practices and PB4LSW.   They were “less likely to work collaboratively with their community, have practices that supported consistency, and data systems that enabled them to use data to make changes to school systems or practices” and consequently need more support (Boyd et al., 2014, p. 27). 

Does implementing PB4LSW in a school make it restorative by default?
Some people who either promote PB4LSW or work in PB4LSW schools claim that PB4LSW automatically renders them a RJP school (Personal communication, Wendy Drewery, May 25 2015).  In this section I am going to discuss three of these claims and after refute them. 
Firstly, the aim of PB4LSW is to improve behaviour management and school discipline and in some schools this is also the reason RJP is introduced (Drewery & Kecskemeti, 2010) so arguably to supporters they must be the same. The claim becomes stronger when the PB4LSW school moves away from a punitive culture, especially when stand down rates decrease (MoE, n.d.), which is at the opposite end of the spectrum to a RJP culture (Wachtel, 1999, as cited in Vaandering, 2010).
Secondly, although PB4LSW does not claim to be restorative as it is not specifically “a philosophy, in action, that places relationships at the heart of the educational experience” (MoE, 2012) they do have similar objectives as both want the creation of a more respectful and inclusive school culture (Boyd et al., 2014).  PB4LSW achieves it by constructing a preventative model of wellbeing (Noble & McGrath, 2008) which rewards positive conduct (Bandura, 1986 as cited in Palmer, 2012) and teaches the desired behaviours.  Some would say that this inevitably fashions a culture which is respectful, inclusive (Boyd et al., 2014) and full of healthy and caring relationships (Cavanagh, 2009) which are also found at the “heart of a successful and happy” RJP school (Hopkins, 2007, p.28).
Finally, PB4LSW doesn’t use the word “justice” specifically but it would contend that it does promote fairness which is associated with the term justice (Vaandering, 2010) through its insistence on consistency.  Enthusiasts may also infer that they are liberating people from poverty which is Zehr’s (1990, as cited in Hopkins, 2007) definition of justice as they are increasing life chances for students by fostering success for all. Therefore PB4LSW must be RJP and vice versa.

However, when these arguments are examined closely RJP and PB4LSW are not identical.  Yes, they have similarities but this doesn’t make them fundamentally the same. People shouldn’t believe that just because the end result may be similar (i.e. respectful school culture) that their journeys are indistinguishable nor use logical fallacy, for example, PB4LSW is not punitive therefore it must be restorative.  To refute this further, I have identified three distinct differences between the two.  One, in PB4LSW there is an emphasis on personal responsibility (Llewellyn, 2012; Richmond, 2009) while in RJP collective responsibility, including the support and needs of the family and community, is considered just as important (Drewery, 2013; Vaandering, 2010).   Two, PB4LSW does not have to give students opportunities to be listened to or change their identity to a preferred and emerging one (McMenamin, 2014) as in RJP schools.  And three, PB4LSW schools could choose the deficit model if students do not follow the expected rules and resort to blame and punishment (Cavanagh, 2009; Hopkins, 2007) unlike RJP schools.

The limitations of PB4LSW
In the first instance there is a limitation to PB4LSW because people do not always follow through with what they agree to on paper.  Unfortunately, some teachers who assent to being on board may choose not follow the new procedures and/or continue to rely on admin to deal with students’ behaviour (Cavanagh, Boyd, Ridley, Anthony, Walshaw, Hunter & Rutherford, 2007).  Agreement on being consistent is also a tricky concept as it is difficult for an individual teacher to be consistent in a single lesson let alone across a whole staff (Richmond, 2009).  Therefore, for consistency to be relevant it has to reside in its intent of being fair.  Even this is problematic as some teachers view fairness through a “Law and Order” lens where they believe that all young people should be treated the same way and if they act out of the prescribed behaviour they get what they deserve.  While others perceive fairness through a “Social Justice” lens where students should be treated differently so everyone can consistently acquire access to what they need to be effective learners (Richmond, 2009).
A number of schools argue that there is true collaboration during the implementation of PB4LSW as the values are chosen and developed by the students (and staff) which increases their ownership in the behaviours that the school considers significant (Boyd et al., 2014).  However, it could be argued that this is PB4LSW’s second constraint as almost certainly there was not collaboration with all students, more than likely just some from Tier 1 nor with the whole school community (Boyd et al., 2014).  Furthermore, according to the School Discipline Window (Wachtel, 1999, as cited in Vaandering, 2010) PB4LSW fits in the “done to” quadrant as it is not concerned with the equality of relationships (Llewellyn, 2012) as the teachers may have somewhat of a choice to be part of it but the rest of the community doesn’t (Wachtel, 1999, as cited in Vaandering, 2010).
A third drawback is in relation to our Priority Learners.  Although during the PB4LSW evaluation the majority of schools answered that it “worked well” as there was a focus on Māori, Pasifika and Special Educational Needs students, there was nevertheless more disagreement about these practices compared to any others (Boyd et al., 2014). The schools suggested that PB4LSW should incorporate Te Kotahitanga strategies and/or other models and research (Boyd et al., 2014) to make it more culturally responsive.  Perhaps the Ministry of Education should have taken NZ’s unique context into account from the beginning rather than preferring an overseas evidence based framework?  (Education Review, August 2013) 
The final limitation is around the actual implementation.  Yes, PB4LSW is concerned with transforming culture by dealing with behaviour differently but teachers are not being instructed in enough detail about how to do this.  It cannot be significant or worthwhile if teachers don’t alter their “beliefs and conceptions of practice” (Smylie, 1995, as cited in Gay, 2010, p. 95).  After this they have to be taught how to use respectful and positive language to help young people build their self-perception as capable individuals and responsible community members (Wood & Freeman-Loftis, 2012). By building respectful relationships with students who may only learn from people they respect and like (Bishop & Berryman, 2006; Pierson) teachers should be able to deescalate incidents in their own classrooms and not always rely on Senior Leaders or outside experts to resolve them (Cavanagh et al., 2007).

Conclusion
In today’s climate school leaders have to find creative ways to reconcile social justice aspirations with market imperatives (Stevenson, 2007) and to a degree PB4LSW does just this.  There is some tangible evidence to show that in PB4LSW schools behaviour improves and retention rates and NCEA Level 1 passes increase (Boyd et al., 2014) where there is no such data for RJP (Drewery, 2014).  Therefore, PB4LSW is improving the life chances of our young people which is a definite social justice and RJP aspiration (Zehr, 1990, as cited in Hopkins, 2007).  Nevertheless, I do not believe that by itself PB4LSW can truly make changes in the behaviour of all of our students.  My suggestion is that schools actively custom the core values of RJP, by making it the philosophical foundation of relationships and the way to respond to wrongdoing and conflict (Cavanagh, et al., 2007) while using the facts, figures and processes of PB4LSW required by the current Government’s improvement agenda (Day, 2005).  This will proactively establish a school culture which is conducive to learning (Warren, et al., 2006) and supports not disempower teachers (Riddell, McCluskey, Lloyd, Kane, Stead & Weedon, 2011) to ensure that all students are educated in respectful, safe, peaceful and inclusive communities where they are valued and their cultures and perspectives are accepted (Feinberg et al., 2005; Warren, et al., 2006).
 



References
Bishop, R., & Berryman, M. (2006). Culture speaks: Cultural relationships and classroom learning. Wellington, N.Z: Huia
Boyd, S., Dingle, R., Herdina, N., New Zealand Council for Educational Research, & New Zealand. Ministry of Education (2014). PB4L school-wide evaluation: Preliminary           findings : Report to the ministry of education. Wellington: Ministry of Education
Cavanagh, T. (2009). Creating schools of peace and nonviolence in a time of war and      violence. Journal of school violence, 8(1), 64-80. doi:10.1080/15388220802067912

Cavanagh, T., Boyd, S., Ridley, K., Anthony, G., Walshaw, M., Hunter, P., & Rutherford, J. (2007). Focusing on relationships creates safety in schools. Set: Research Information   for Teachers, 1, 31-35.
Day, S. (2005).  Sustaining success in challenging contexts: leadership in English schools.              Journal of Educational Administration, 43(6), 573- 583.
Drewery, W. (2013). Restorative approaches in New Zealand schools: A developmental   approach. In Sellman, E., Cremin, H. & McCluskey, G. (Eds.) Restorative Approaches to Conflict in Schools: Inter-disciplinary perspectives on managing          relationships in the classroom, (pp. 40-50). London, UK: Routledge
Drewery, W. (2014, June 2).  Reflecting on Issues in RP [Panopto].  Retrieved from             http://coursecast.its.waikato.ac.nz/Panopto/Pages/Viewer.aspx?id=51ab01ab-2e7a-        4c30-a87e-078f93a38f48
Drewery, W., & Kecskemeti, M. (2010). Restorative Practices and Behaviour Management in      Schools: Discipline Meets Care. Waikato Journal of Education, 15(3), 110-113
Education Review (August, 2013).  PB4L what’s the fuss about?  Retrieved from                             http://www.educationreview.co.nz/magazine/july-2013/pb4l-whats-          the-fuss-          about/#.VWZcc8-qrp4
ERO (2011).  Positive foundations for learning: Confident and competent children in early           childhood services.  Retrieved from http://www.ero.govt.nz/National-            Reports/Positive-Foundations-for-Learning-Confident-and-Competent-Children-in-      Early-Childhood-Services-October-2011/Introduction
Feuerborn, L. L., Tyre, A. D., & King, J. P. (2015). The staff perceptions of behavior and     discipline survey: A tool to help achieve systemic change through schoolwide    positive behavior support. Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 17(2), 116-126.         doi:10.1177/1098300714556675
Feinberg, A. B., Handler, M. W., Putnam, R. F., & Luiselli, J. K. (2005). Whole-school positive        behaviour support: Effects on student discipline problems and academic         performance. Educational Psychology, 25(2), 183-198.           doi:10.1080/0144341042000301265
Gay, G. (2010). Acting on beliefs in teacher education for cultural diversity. Journal of     Teacher Education. 61(1-2) p.143-152.  DOI: 10.1177/0022487109347320.
Hopkins, B. (2007). Restorative approaches in UK schools.  International Journal of           Restorative Justice, 2(3).
Llewellyn, J.J. (2012). Restorative Justice:  Thinking relationally about justice. In J. Downie &       J.J. Llewellyn (Eds).  Being relational: Reflections on relational theory and health law,    (pp.89-108).  Toronto: UBC Press.
McMenamin, D. (2014). Supporting reputation and behavior change at school through    exploring and retelling preferred identity stories. Journal of Systemic Therapies, 33(3), 69-86.
McIntosh, K., MacKay, L. D., Hume, A. E., Doolittle, J., Vincent, C. G., Horner, R. H., & Ervin,        R. A. (2011). Development and initial validation of a measure to assess factors related to sustainability of school-wide positive behavior support. Journal of Positive            Behavior Interventions, 13(4), 208-218. doi:10.1177/1098300710385348
MoE (2012).  Restorative practices in NZ: The seven restorative practices. NZ: Ministry of           Education.
MoE (n.d.).  Positive behaviour for learning.  Retrieved from http://pb4l.tki.org.nz/
Noble, T., & McGrath, H. (2008). The positive educational practices framework: A tool for           facilitating the work of educational psychologists in promoting pupil    wellbeing. Educational and Child Psychology, 25(2), 119-134.
Palmer, S. (2012). Multimodal coaching and its application to workplace, life and health coaching. Coaching Psykologi-The Danish Journal of Coaching Psychology, 2(1), 91-       98.
Pierson, R.  Every kid needs a champion.  [Video file]. Retrieved from        http://ed.ted.com/on/YcSPXhYB/

Riddell, S., McCluskey, G., Lloyd, G., Kane, J., Stead, J., & Weedon, E. (2011). 'Teachers are          afraid we are stealing their strength': A risk society and restorative approaches in    school. British Journal of Educational Studies, 59(2), 105-119. doi:10.1080/00071005.2011.565741
Stevenson, H.P. (2007).  A case study in leading schools for social justice: When morals and         markets collide.  Journal of Educational Administration, 45(6), 769-781.  doi:           10.1108/09578230710829937
Stoll, L., & Temperley, J. (2009). Creative leadership: a challenge of our times. School      Leadership and Management, 29(1), 65-78.
Thrupp, M. & Lupton, R. (2006). Taking school contexts more seriously: The social justice            challenge.  British Journal of Educational Studies, 54(3), 308-328.
Thrupp, M. & Hursh, D. (2006).  The limits of managerialist school reform: the case of target-    setting in England and the USA.   Chapter in Lauder, H., Brown, P., Dillabough J. and            Halsey A. H. (eds) (2006) Education, Globalization and Social Change, Oxford: Oxford            University Press.
Vaandering, D. (2010). The significance of critical theory for restorative justice in education.      Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies, 2(32), 145-176, http://dx.doi.org/:10.1080/10714411003799165
Warren, J. S., Bohanon-Edmonson, H. M., Turnbull, A. P., Sailor, W., Wickham, D., Griggs, P.,       & Beech, S. E. (2006). School-wide positive behavior support: Addressing behavior       problems that impede student learning. Educational Psychology Review, 18(2), 187.           doi:10.1007/s10648-006-9008-1
Williams, M., & Winslade, J. (2008). Using “Undercover teams” to re-story bullying          relationships. Journal of Systemic Therapies, 27(1), 1-15.   doi:10.1521/jsyt.2008.27.1.1
Wood, C., & Freeman-Loftis, B. (2012). Want positive behavior? Use positive language.    Education Digest, 78(2), 31.



Should Restorative Practice be made a legal requirement in schools?


An essay for uni - I don't believe it should be but am taking a position!

In this paper I am aligning myself to the position that Restorative Practice (RP) culture specifically should be made a legal requirement in New Zealand schools.  Firstly, I outline RP in schools and in more detail RP culture and why it is so important for the success of our students.  Secondly, I supplement my argument by examining NZ’s past education initiatives with our Māori students that have not been successful because they were not legal requirements.  Thirdly, I propose that RP culture must be monitored by the Government if it is to be made legal and give some practical examples.  Fourthly, I acknowledge the issue of authenticity and logically question it in relation to implementing a legal requirement.  Finally, I conclude why RP is a legal necessity in NZ schools through the adoption of the Ministry of Education’s PB4L RP model, at the very least, but also address my conditions. 
Firstly, RP in schools, which are by their nature complex and dynamic (Cavanagh, 2007), is a perplexing concept as there seems to be no consensus of what it actually means (Gavrielides, 2008).  Some schools see themselves as RP because they use restorative conferencing as a behaviour management tool (Drewery, 2007; Hopkins, 2007; Vaandering, 2010) by trying to use reintegrative shaming not stigmatised shaming to restore the relationship between two or more people (Braithwaite, 2002).  However, others came to realise that they can only truly be a RP school when there is a change in the whole school culture.  It is more than how they deal with wrong doing and conflict but also how they consciously work towards creating a culture of peace and non-violence (Cavanagh, 2007) through positive and respectful relationships (Drewery, 2013).
RP as a whole school culture has its roots in indigenous approaches where the responsibility is collective not individual and it is understood that the fabric of the family, community and society needs to be addressed (Drewery, 2013; Maxwell & Morris, 2006; Vaandering, 2010).   It is bound in the respect, concern, dignity and mana of relationships and not just about restoring them to what they were like before but aiming for the ideal of equality (Drewery, 2013; Llewellyn, 2012).  If we want to have peaceable classrooms, schools (Cavanagh, 2007; Crawford & Bodine, 2001) and ultimately a Peaceable society (Drewery, 2004) then our schools have to embed RP culture into their very essence of being. To do so the whole school community has to collectively embrace restorative principles (Buckley & Maxwell, 2007; Drewery, 2015).

The NZ Government itself does recognise the key role of RP culture in schools to ensure that all students have the right to become confident, connected, actively involved, lifelong learners (MoE, 2007) as it recently expanded its Positive Behaviour for Learning (PB4L) initiative.  The pilot project PB4L RP is defined as “a relational approach to school life grounded in beliefs about equality, dignity, mana and the potential of all people” and has to be at the heart of PB4L school culture (MoE, 2015).  The goal is to alter the environment, systems and practices as well as to improve staff-student relationships so students can increase their engagement and learning while simultaneously making positive behaviour choices.  Yet, by making it a non-statutory requirement the question is: are schools going to actually do it properly or just give a tokenistic tick?

We may have already seen some changes in RP culture signposted by a number of NZ Principals who said that they no longer give suspensions as they are less necessary and/or discipline situations are handled with restorative solutions (MoE 2009).  But regrettably, my examination of the history of education in NZ has taught me that if something is not made a legal obligation then it doesn’t necessary happen even when it is morally right.  This is true with NZ’s indigenous young people in schools.  The MoE have had numerous plans underpinned by the philosophy that “Māori success is NZ success” (MoE, 2008, p.4).  One recent example is “Ka Hikitia” (2008) which outlines ways to allow Māori to succeed as Māori.  Another one is “Tātaiako: Cultural Competencies for Teachers of Māori Learners” (MoE, 2011) which was introduced to improve teachers’ relationships and engagement with Māori learners and with their whānau and iwi.  Both provide a framework and guidance for people who work with young Māori to help them reach their full potential while keeping their Māori identity. 
However, these are just frameworks and not legal obligations.  Although there is some evidence that the quality of teaching for Māori students has improved since 2006, current research information and national and international achievement data continue to show that there is sustained Māori underachievement in education (ERO, 2010).  It is also hard for our Māori students to be successful in school when they are being stood down, suspended and excluded more than any other ethnic group (Education Counts, July 2014).
The Government can encourage our schools to learn how to remove “the burden of having to learn under unnatural cultural conditions” for our Māori students (Brown, 2007, p.61) and train our teachers to become culturally responsive (Gay, 2002) but they cannot make them.  ERO can report on the success of our Māori students and advise schools to improve their approach for Māori by using Ka Hikitia and other projects and the MoE can ask schools to break down results by ethnicity and comment on them.  Even the Treaty of Waitangi, where its principles, in theory, protect Māori learners’ rights to achieve true citizenship by reflecting partnership, protection and participation in school (Berryman & Bateman, 2008) is often either disregarded completely or paid lipservice to in many schools as it is not part of domestic law (NZ History).
This confirms that if we want to ensure that RP is implemented in schools the Government cannot only “encourage” them to do so they have to make it a legal requirement and closely monitor it.  They have to ensure that Social Justice is intertwined with the whole school culture and that caring (Vaandering, 2010) is embedded into all of our schools.  This will guarantee that all our students, including our Māori students, are educated in respectful, inclusive communities where they are valued (Shields, Bishop & Mazawi, 2005).  Not only should ERO report on RP but also schools should be legally required to make public, in a sensitive way, the results of their Wellbeing Surveys which explores the extent to which a school is creating a safe and caring climate (NZCER).  They also need to be transparent about how they are going to change their school culture to reflect RP values to improve these results as well as their specific actions.  For example, implementing the MoE’s developmental programmes such as Friends, Check and Connect, and Kaupapa Māori and how all of this fits in with a change in school culture to reflect RP values.
Individual school culture can be defined simply as “what we value around here” (MoE, 2008, p.18) but in reality it is very difficult to pin down the specifics as it is constantly being “constructed and shaped through interactions with others and through reflections on life and the world in general” (Finnan as cited in Hinde, 2004, p.2). To be able to make any changes in a school’s culture there has to be a deep understanding of its unique context by examining its subcultures, historical and generational effects, physical environment, socio-economic conditions, belief systems and practices (Drewery, 2007; Drewery, 2013; Hinde, 2004; Robinson, 2007). 
Once the school has a deep understanding of its past and present it has to create an authentic shared vision as a picture of the desired future with the fundamental values and beliefs being articulated early on in the process (Harris, James, Gunraj, Clarke & Harris, 2006; Kise, 2012; Nemerowicz & Rosi, 1997). Gay (2010) recommends that Principals ideally start with changing the attitudes and beliefs of their staff, before striving to get teachers to modify their practice with a simultaneous cultural understanding and respect for difference (Robinson, 2007).   An authentic Principal who leads with conviction (Shamir & Eilam, 2005) is key in ensuring that everyone in the school also has a sense of ownership and empowerment (Davies, Davies, & Ellison; O’Donnell, 2007) to create a “climate of trust and understanding” (Maxfield & Flumerfelt, 2009, p.46) and therefore an authentic school culture.
Although I believe that RP culture should be a legal requirement I acknowledge the issue of authenticity which I subscribe to as fundamental in our education system as I value self-awareness and open, transparent, trusting and genuine relationships (Fry & Kriger 2009).  Therefore, I have to logically question whether RP culture can be forced upon a school community as a legal requirement.  Yes, people can rewrite their identity, as the person is not the problem, the problem is the problem (Williams & Winslade, 2008) but unfortunately, staff may say that they are on board with the legal changes while actually believing that RP at best is only a “slap on the wrist with a wet bus ticket” (Drewery, March 16. 2015) as they don’t want to lose their jobs.  How is this authentic and how will making something that the staff do not truly have confidence in help improve the lives of our students?  Another concern is that I think authentic leadership, which is professionally effective, ethically sound, and consciously reflective (Begley, 2003), is imperative so shouldn’t Principals be able to adopt methods that they advocate to serve the needs of their students in their specific contexts (Bottery, 2007; Drewery, 2007; Drewery, 2013; Hinde, 2004; Robinson, 2007)? What happens if this is not RP?  Consequently, if RP is made a legal requirement we cannot expect all of our leaders and teachers to be authentic at least in the beginning.  However, as I have faith in RP culture I believe that with the right approach nearly everyone can change.  The Government must be committed to provide continual training and support using the whole restorative practice continuum (Morrison, Blood & Thorsborne, 2005) to motivate reluctant staff (Day, 2015).  In this case the behaviour and words change first, and then hopefully the attitudes and beliefs (Drewery, 2004) in the quest for authenticity.  Finally, it is the Government’s responsibility to re-evaluate its professional standards of teachers by utilising positive accountability (Kise, 2012) if staff do not want to change their identity (Williams & Winslade, 2008) after robust support.

Conclusion
Even though I acknowledge the issues with authenticity I still support the argument that the NZ Government should make all schools legally adopt RP culture as schools are developmental institutions (Hopkins, 2007) which are an ideal place to grow our young people.  We know that fostering positive, respectful relationships can have a “profound impact on [students] overall behaviour, learning, and achievement outcomes” (White, 1989 as cited in MoE, 2015) which is a win-win solution for all.  Students improve their life chances and schools improve their position in the context of high stakes testing when their results are published in league tables (Stevenson, 2007). It allows Principals to be able contend with the “tensions in their roles of mediating Government policies” while being committed to “principles of equity and social justice” (Day, 2005, p.576-7). 
I suggest that schools adopt the PB4L RP model, at the very least, as it offers best-practice tools and techniques to build and maintain contextualised, positive, respectful relationships across the whole school community (MoE, 2015).  However, the MoE cannot just leave schools to add another decoration to their already full Christmas trees which glitter from a distance, but lack in depth and coherence (Bryk, Sebring, Kerbow, Rollow & Easton as cited in Fullan, 2001, p.35).  It has to fully support schools with space and time for excellent Professional Learning which is a vital lever to accelerate change, at every level of education (Harris, Day & Hadfield, 2003).  RP has to be central in all Government funded teacher and leader professional learning programmes where teachers are taught or reminded about how to be respectful and use respectful language with all members of the school community as well how to conduct the spectrum of RP conferencing (MoE, 2015). Correspondingly it needs to be fully funded and although currently the Government has provided $10,000 to each school which participates in PB4L this is not enough as culture change may take up to five years to occur (MoE, 2015; Morrison et al., 2005). 
However, in isolation the creation of peaceable schools (Crawford & Bodine, 2001) through RP culture will not lead to Peaceable Communities (Drewery, 2004) or ultimately a Civil Society (Morrison et al., 2005).  The Government has to guarantee that Social Justice concerns are addressed nationally and the ‘politics of caring’ is deeply entrenched across all communities (Shields et al., 2005) through an authentic RP cultural shift.

References
Begley, P.T. (2003). Authentic Leadership and Collaborative Process: Foundations of School        Community.  Leading & Managing, 9(2), 100-105.
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