Research Report Implementing Restorative Justice in Rhode Island Schools
Subtitle
First-Year Implementation of Case Conferencing
Akiva Liberman, Michael Katz
Display Date
File
File
Download Report
(650.46 KB)

Restorative justice provides a possible alternative to exclusionary responses (e.g., suspension) to student misbehavior. A set of schools in Rhode Island is testing one restorative justice approach, family group conferencing with misbehaving students. This report concerns the first year of implementation. This report finds that, over the first year of implementation, family conferencing requires a consistent referral process, which in turn depends on buy-in and support from school administrators, disciplinary staff, and teachers. Pre-conference work and post-conference follow-up maximize the effectiveness of restorative agreements reached in conference. Successful family group conferencing addresses deeper causes of misbehavior, helps students understand their actions, repairs harm, and develops supportive relationships.
Research Areas Education Children and youth
Tags K-12 education Schooling Kids in context
Policy Centers Justice Policy Center