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Creating Safe Playgrounds: A Whole-School Approach

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Almost all students love recess. But schools find that behavior and safety problems can often occur on the playground-for reasons that are easy to understand. Adult supervision on playgrounds may be l

Jim's Hints for Using...
Creating Safe Playgrounds: A Whole-School Approach
Encourage Fair Selection of Children for Teams. Some children with poor social skills or a limited number of friends may find themselves regularly excluded from play groups or selected last for teams. Playground monitor can take steps in organizing teams to be sure that all children have an equal chance to participate. For example, the monitor may randomize teams by lining up children by birthday or height, then have the line count off by 2's to create teams.

Help Monitors to Learn Student Names. One of the most powerful ways that playground monitors can gain positive influence over students is to learn their names! At the start of the school year, teachers can invite monitors into their classrooms to teach children rules to playground games. Not only would children love a lesson on games, but also the monitor can begin to learn children's identities and acquire status as a colleague and equal of the classroom teacher.

Teach Children To Play Cooperative Games. There is some evidence (e.g., Heck et al., 2001) that children engage less frequently in aggressive behavior when they are playing cooperative games (that is, games in which students are not directly competing with others) than when engaged in competitive games. In fact, the effect of reduced student aggression may persist for a time even after the cooperative games are over. Your school may want to invite physical education instructors or other school staff who know a range of cooperative games and activities to train playground monitors in their use.

imited. Also, students may not always know what behaviors are expected of them on the playground, be tempted to engage in risky behavior on play equipment or get involved in rough physical horseplay with other children that results in fights or injuries.

The following intervention package (adapted from Lewis et al., 1998 & Heck et al., 2001) teaches children appropriate rules for playground behavior and allows classrooms to earn rewards over time for positive behavior during recess. Playground monitors reinforce students for appropriate behavior, assign students to brief time-out as needed for misbehaving, and provide structure when needed by teaching studentsrules to games and organizing activities.

Steps in Implementing This Intervention
Step 1: Create Staff Guidelines for Defining 'Appropriate' and 'Inappropriate' Playground Behaviors. As a school staff, agree upon written definitions for acceptable and unacceptable playground behavior. Include specific examples of each. For instance, a school may include "aggression" under its listing of 'Inappropriate Behaviors', and define aggression as "unwanted or hurtful physical contact with another student (such as hitting or pushing); unwanted or hurtful use of language (such as name-calling, verbal threats, or swearing)."

Step 2: Train Playground Monitors. The most important role in this intervention is that of the playground monitor. He or she should be trained to:

Step 3: Train Students in Appropriate Playground Behaviors. Prior to the intervention, teachers in participating classrooms should introduce their students to the behavioral guidelines (created in Step 1) for using the playground. Since students learn best with interactive activities, teachers will want to model the appropriate behaviors and have students practice them as well.

Here is a teacher tip: Once students seem to understand how they are expected to behave during recess, take the entire class out to the playground for a supervised practice session. Have students practice their skills and give them immediate feedback (e.g.,
"Class, watch Travis come down the slide with his feet forward. That's the correct way to do it. Nice job!"). Practicing right on the playground will help children to more quickly generalize their skills (apply them to a new setting).

Step 4: Start the Intervention. Once the intervention has begun:

 

Troubleshooting
Children will not obey the playground monitors.
If children refuse to comply with monitors' requests, your school can give monitors the power to temporarily suspend the playground privileges of any student who willfully disobeys them. (It is important, of course, that monitors use this power judiciously, consistently, and fairly.) If one or more students from a particular classroom are particularly disrespectful, the classroom teacher may want to make surprise visits to the playground to show support for the monitor and assist him or her in dealing with noncompliant students.

The playground intervention is not very effective. If your school discovers that the intervention is not working, be sure that:

 

References

Heck, A., Collins, J., & Peterson, L. (2001). Decreasing children's risk taking on the playground. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,34, 349-352.

Lewis, T.J., Sugai, G., & Colvin, Geoff (1998). Reducing problem behavior through a school-wide system of effective behavioral support: Investigation of a school-wide social skills training program and contextual interventions.
School Psychology Review, 27, 446-459.

*Thanks to school psychologist Kelly Malone for selecting graphics for this intervention write-up.
 

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