Creating A School Community
Creating A School Community
Eric Schaps
(Taken From Educational Leadership Volume 60 #6)
We also bond with the people and institutions that help us satisfy our
needs (Watson, Battistich, & Solomon, 1997), which makes the creation of
caring, inclusive, participatory communities for our students especially
important. When a school meets students' basic psychological needs,
students become increasingly committed to the school's norms, values, and
goals. And by enlisting students in maintaining that sense of community,
the school provides opportunities for students to learn skills and develop
habits that will benefit them throughout their lives.
These benefits are often lasting. Researchers have found that the positive
effects of certain community-building programs for elementary schools
persist through middle and high school. During middle school, for example,
students from elementary schools that had implemented the
Developmental Studies Center's Child Development Project—a program
that emphasizes community building—were found to outperform middle
school students from comparison elementary schools on academic
outcomes (higher grade-point averages and achievement test scores),
teacher ratings of behavior (better academic engagement, respectful
behavior, and social skills), and self-reported misbehavior (less misconduct
in school and fewer delinquent acts) (Battistich, 2001). A study that
assessed the enduring effects of the Seattle Social Development Project—
another elementary school program—on former participants at age 18
found lower rates of violent behavior, heavy drinking, and sexual activity, as
well as higher academic motivation and achievement, for program
participants relative to comparison group students (Hawkins, Catalano,
Kosterman, Abbot, & Hill, 1999).
Community-Building Approaches
Fortunately, research also suggests that schools can strengthen students'
sense of community by adopting feasible, commonsense approaches. Four
approaches are particularly beneficial.
Class meetings are useful for setting goals and norms, planning
activities, and identifying and solving problems. They are essential for
building peer relationships and fostering shared goals in the
classroom. Class meetings at the beginning of the year, for example,
include a few “unity builders.” Students may bring a favorite toy or
memento and discuss it with a partner, who then presents it to the
entire class. The class later may collaboratively establish goals for the
year (such as “To make our room a safe place for everyone”), shared
values (such as “To treat one another with respect”), or shared
norms (such as “To make decisions by consensus whenever we can”).
A buddies program pairs whole classes of older and younger students
for academic and recreational activities. Every older student gets a
younger buddy for the year. They get acquainted by interviewing
each other, charting ways in which they are alike and different, and
sharing their classroom portfolios. During the year, they may read or
play math games together, visit museums, work together for a cause,
or create a joint journal of their activities. At year's end, they show
their mutual appreciation by exchanging thank you notes or gifts that
they have made. Buddies programs help create powerful cross-age
relationships, teach important social skills, and create a caring ethos
in the school.
“Homeside” activities are short conversation activities for students
and parents or other caregivers to do at home once or twice a
month. These conversations, mostly interviews conducted by
students with their parents, link school learning with home
experiences and perspectives. For 4th grade state history units, for
example, students interview their parents about how their family or
ancestors first came to their state. Whether family members have
lived in the state for 100 years or 100 days, the story of how and why
they came to settle there is part of state history and serves to
personalize learning for students.
Schoolwide community-building activities link students, parents, and
teachers; help foster new school traditions; and promote
helpfulness, inclusiveness, and responsibility. They can be as
undemanding as Family Film Nights, invitations to the entire family to
view a feature-length movie at school and perhaps discuss a question
related to it within the family. Or the activities can be as challenging
as creating a Family Heritage Museum, for which students and their
caregivers prepare displays of information and artifacts that tell
something about their family heritage. The school then features the
displays for a week or two and organizes an evening event so that
parents and children can view them together.