School discipline and social work practice: Application of research and theory to intervention
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Cameron, M. (Author)
- Sheppard, S.M. (Author)
Title
School discipline and social work practice: Application of research and theory to intervention
Abstract
Research has identified a relationship between school disciplinary actions and poor academic and psychosocial functioning of students subjected to them. The ways in which school discipline is a direct contributor to students' academic and psychosocial difficulty needs to be further established empirically. Several theories, based in existing research and theory in sociology of education and educational psychology, have been proposed to explain the school discipline - student dysfunction relationship. They generally suggest three pathways: disciplinary actions may contribute to students' psychological problems; student misbehavior may be encouraged through ineffective and unintentionally paradoxical learning experiences; and disciplinary practices may damage students' relationship with school. School social workers and others working with children who have been disciplined at school can use these research findings and theories as an assessment framework to guide their interventions.The awareness of the iatrogenic potential of school discipline and informed assessment can support a range of evidence-based alternatives to school discipline. © 2006 National Association of Social Workers.
Publication
Children and Schools
Publisher
National Association of Social Workers
Date
2006
Volume
28
Issue
1
Pages
15-22
Journal Abbr
Child. Schools
Citation Key
cameronSchoolDisciplineSocial2006
ISSN
15328759 (ISSN)
Archive
Scopus
Language
English
Extra
27 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Cameron, M., & Sheppard, S. M. (2006). School discipline and social work practice: Application of research and theory to intervention. Children and Schools, 28(1), 15–22. Scopus. https://doi.org/10.1093/cs/28.1.15
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