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Arleta
2025-2026School Climate Plan
Most recent update August 20, 2025
Mission
Vision
Core Values
At Arleta we are lifelong learners. We learn how to think critically, communicate clearly, and solve problems collaboratively. We learn how to be mindful, empathetic, and resilient community members.
An Arleta student will be a compassionate critical thinker, able to collaborate and solve problems, and be prepared to lead a more socially just world.
Be Respectful
Be Responsible
Be Safe
Motto
I am because we are.
Our motto expresses our vision and provides guidance between
our mission and our school expectations or core values
(which are practical but not visionary)
The goal of a motto is to stretch us from where we are now
to a sense of belonging, love and joy for every student.
What Is School Climate?
School Climate Overview
School Climate encompasses culturally relevant Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS), restorative practices and schoolwide social-emotional learning opportunities for all students in their classrooms. Racial equity and social justice is woven into all aspects of school climate to ensure that all students feel a sense of belonging and have a positive school experience.
Multi-Tiered Systems of Support
School climate is an essential component of the Multi-Tiered System of Support (MTSS) framework. MTSS is a proactive, data-driven practice used at Portland Public Schools to support all students. It uses evidence-based instruction, intervention and assessment practices to ensure that every student receives the appropriate level of support based on their level of need. Within an MTSS structure, all students receive sustaining Tier I universal supports. Additional supports are provided for students that need them through Tier II interventions (targeted group supports), and Tier III interventions (individualized supports). These tiered academic and behavioral interventions help eliminate barriers to learning and enable every student to successfully reach their full potential.
Schoolwide Values and Common Area Expectations
Our School’s Core Values are
1. Safe
2. Respectful
3. Responsible
We have updated our core values in the following year in collaboration with students, staff, families and community input. Posters are distributed throughout the building in order to make them visible to students, staff and families. The intention is to send a consistent message about what our school community values and how it looks different in various common areas. This will help Arleta ensure that our core values are inclusive and affirming.
Students need to understand and exercise our core values on a regular basis to master the skills to be successful and prepared to be college and career ready. All adults acknowledge and reinforce these core values when interacting with students.
Our core values are woven into our regular teaching practices in every lesson and in every class period throughout the grade levels. Staff name them consistently and strategically teach and review our core values throughout the school year.
Common Area Expectations
classrooms
safe
respectful
responsible
Body to Self
Follow Classroom Agreements
Use Materials Appropriately
Stay with Class
Kind and Helpful
Take Care of Yourself
hallways
safe
respectful
responsible
Walking Feet
Quiet
Go Straight to Your Destination
Body to Self
Enjoy Hallway Work with Eyes Only
Stay with Class
bathrooms
safe
respectful
responsible
Body to self
Private Space
Garbage in Bins
Feet on the ground
Your Stall Only
Report Problems
Cafeteria
safe
respectful
responsible
Body to Self
Raise Hand
Clean Up Your Mess
Stay in Your Seat
Level 1 voice
Focus on Eating
Walking feet
Playground
safe
respectful
responsible
Follow the Expectations
All are Welcome
Take Care of and Return Equipment
Stay Inside Boundaries
Take Turns and Share
Line Up at Whistle
Body to Self
Teaching Common Area Expectations
All students are taught the common area expectations at least three times a year after long breaks.
Arleta common area expectations lessons
Schoolwide (Tier 1) Climate Practices
Each Arleta student deserves to come to school and feel seen, safe and valued. In order to make this happen, adults across the school intentionally support all students by implementing the following:
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A warm greeting by name each morning
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Classroom Community Agreements
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Community Circles
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Praise, Sun Buck, Dolphin to acknowledge expected behavior
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School counselor classroom lessons
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Social Emotional Learning classroom lessons
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Common Area Expectation lessons three times per year
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Calming spaces in each classroom
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Flexible seating
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Think Sheets to help reflect on behavior
Student Intervention Team: Additional Behavior & Academic Supports (Tier II and Tier III)
When Tier 1 classroom and schoolwide supports are not enough to ensure student success, students may be brought to the school Student Intervention Team (SIT) to develop and implement Tier II and III interventions.
The Student Intervention Team (SIT) is a collaborative, general education solution-generating team made up of a variety of school perspectives. The purpose of the SIT is to
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support teachers in reflecting on and enhancing their Tier I practices and
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implement targeted Tier II and III behavior and Tier III academic interventions when needed.
Utilizing an equity lens, the team considers the whole student when making decisions that affect their long-term educational experience and sense of belonging in PPS. SIT works to provide every student and adult what they need to thrive in the general education setting. Families are notified about student strengths and challenges, as well as planned interventions, at all points in the process.
Example Tier II Behavior Interventions
Function: Access/Obtain
Check In/Check Out
Meaningful Work
Social/Emotional Skills Group
Check and Connect
Function: Escape/Avoid
Breaks are Better
Check and Connect
Social/Emotional Skills Group
Example Tier III Behavior Practices & Intervention
PRACTICES
(non-exhaustive)
Safety Plan
Supervision Plan
Planning for Managing Escalating Behaviors (with FBA/BSP)
INTERVENTION
(exhaustive)
Individualized interventions outlined in the FBA/BSP
Personal electronic devices:
In alignment with the new PPS board policy, students must keep personal electronic devices off and away throughout the school day. This includes cell phones, tablets, smart watches, and similar devices. This is reflected in our school’s behavior matrix and discipline flowchart, linked below.
Behavior Definition And Discipline Practices
Behavior level calibration will be conducted by school staff in order to properly reflect the evolving needs of our community and to accommodate the diverse racial, cultural, linguistic and developmental needs of our school.
Defining Behaviors
Arleta School Behavior Matrix 25-26 (Tech)
Arleta staff has also been using Arleta Discipline Flow Chart to calibrate around and describe how staff respond to unexpected behaviors. If a student is escalated such that the flowchart does not meet their needs, they may utilize the school's de-escalation space. De-escalation spaces are a predesignated space in the school, not the classroom, for students to de-escalate with adult support.
Purpose of All Student Behavior Responses:
De-escalate, Resolve, Restore, Re-teach, Return to Learning
Effective Classroom Practices Plan
Every teacher will have an Effective Classroom Practices Plan (ECP Plan). ECP Plans will be shared with administration no later than the day before back to school night. Co-creating classroom practices reduces variability between classrooms and makes it more consistent for students. Our plans are provided below and professional development time will be provided in the first two weeks of school to complete these documents.
The Effective Classroom Practices Plan template, covers the essential features of effective classroom practices: Structure, teaching expectations, acknowledging positive behaviors, and supporting regulation & restorative practices.
Folder with all teachers’ Effective Classroom Practices Plans
Link to Arleta’s school-wide Guest Teacher Support System
Feedback and Acknowledgement Systems
Research shows that when staff observe and acknowledge students exhibiting appropriate behaviors, those behaviors will increase and misbehaviors will decrease. Specific praise is extremely important in increasing the recurrence of appropriate behaviors. When observing appropriate behaviors in the common areas/ classrooms/ buses, all staff acknowledge classes exhibiting our core values verbally and by handing out a dolphin card, along with specific praise.
Description of our school-wide acknowledgement system:
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Dolphins - earned by whole classes meeting common expectations
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Any staff member can award a dolphin to classes they see meeting expectations
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Classrooms that earn 20 dolphins choose a classroom celebration
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As we learn more about Caring Schools Communities we will plan some whole school events to celebrate our citizenship
Family Involvement & Feedback
AUGUST
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Leap Into Kindergarten
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Community Care Day
SEPTEMBER
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Back to School Night
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Site Council Meeting
OCTOBER
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Site Council Meeting
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Harvest Festival
NOVEMBER
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Conferences
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Site Council Meeting
DECEMBER
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Site Council Meeting
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Winter Bazaar
JANUARY
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Site Council Meeting
FEBRUARY
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Black Excellence Celebration
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Kindergarten Open House
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Site Council Meeting
MARCH
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Site Council Meeting
APRIL
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Kindergarten Open House and tours
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Site Council Meeting
MAY
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Site Council Meeting
JUNE
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Site Council Meeting
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Kindergarten & 1st Grade Ice Cream Social
Data That Informs Our Climate Plan
Culturally Responsive Tiered Fidelity Inventory (CR-TFI) guides the action planning for the implementation of a positive school climate and connects directly with this School Climate Plan.
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The assessment component is completed once a year as a summative assessment. Twice additionally as formative assessments (conducted in September, January and/or May)
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The CR-TFI is utilized by school teams to assess and plan implementation of all three tiers. The Climate Team is responsible for tier 1 and A score of 80% or better indicates a well-implemented tier
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The TFI action plan is revisited on a monthly basis
Recent TFI scores & Climate Plan
Successful Schools Survey (SSS)
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Completed once a year in November by all students (grades 3-12), staff, and families.
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Reviewed by the School Climate Team and shared with staff, students and families. Used to monitor and adjust climate initiatives.
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Accessed via the Panorama dashboard.
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PDF of data - trying to link 24-25 SSS
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