Mark your Calendar for the Application Period for 2026-27: Jan. 6-16, 2026
Code of Civility
The education of a child happens only through a partnership between the child, school faculty and staff, parent(s) or guardian(s), the community and district office employees. Partnership is an active state that includes sharing responsibilities, having meaningful communication and welcomed participation.
When people who are working together agree, the partnership runs smoothly. Two people will not always agree, and that can make partnership difficult. The partnership is most powerful when we agree on how to disagree. We must be civil in our discourse.
Civility is often described by its absence. We hear of harmful actions, such as road rage, physical confrontation, ethnic stereotypes and slurs. But civility is not just an absence of harm. It is the affirmation of what is best about each of us individually and collectively. It is more than saying “please” and “thank you.” It is reflecting our respect for others in our behavior, regardless of whether we know or like them. It is not simply being politically correct and should not to be used to stifle criticism or comment. It is being truthful and kind and taking responsibility for our own actions, rather than blaming others. As we communicate with each other, we need to remember that we are working together to benefit the children of this community.
Therefore, the Board requires that, as we communicate, students, PCS faculty and staff, parents, guardians and all other members of the community shall:
1. Always treat each other with courtesy and respect. This means:
2. Treat each other with kindness. This means:
3. Take responsibility for our own actions. This means:
4. Cooperate with each other. This means:
PROMOTING POSITIVE SCHOOL CLIMATE AND CULTURE
The main components of a school’s climate include the student and adult relationships, teaching and learning, the physical environment, and safety. Having positive relationships is essential to creating a positive school climate. Therefore, school leaders and teachers work to incorporate empathic practices to foster a climate that allows students to learn and carry out their best behavior in the school community.
A positive school climate includes:
RESTORATIVE PRACTICES
PCS has implemented a continuum of restorative practices based on the needs and responsibilities of community members. At Tier 1 and 2, restorative practices/approaches focus on building relationships, a sense of school community and rebuilding and repairing relationships for students who have committed a non-violent behavioral offense in violation of the Code. At Tier 3, approaches focus on restorative interventions for students involved in high-risk behavior, including, but not limited to, alcohol, drugs or theft.
The restorative circle is a versatile community-building technique that can be used in both cases. Circles can be used proactively to develop relationships and build community and reactive capacities. They can also be used to respond to wrongdoing, conflicts and problems. Circles help the students and adults understand interpersonal relationships, maintain respectful attitudes, and find solutions to conflicts. Circles provide an opportunity to speak and listen in a safe atmosphere. They allow adults and students to be heard and offer their perspectives. Circles can also be used to celebrate students, begin and end the day, and are especially useful for putting difficult topics on the table.
All interventions should balance the student’s needs, those affected by the behavior, and the overall school community’s needs. When using restorative strategies/practices to structure learning opportunities and help them make more constructive choices, teachers and administrators should consider the following factors:
POSITIVE BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS AND SUPPORT (PBIS)
Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS) is a nationally recognized approach to supporting positive academic and behavioral outcomes for all students. In Pinellas County Schools (PCS), PBIS is the behavioral component of the Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS).
Extensive research shows that PBIS utilizes a positive approach to discipline. PBIS helps both teachers and administrators explore and adopt positive and preventative approaches that improve their ability to reduce disruptions which lead to office referrals, in-school suspensions and out-of-school suspensions that decrease students’ instructional time. PBIS ultimately affects the school’s very culture to shift attention to positive behavior and successful learning systems for students, teachers and administrators.
PBIS is not a specific intervention or curriculum. By focusing on data collection and analyses, PBIS provides a framework of proactive, evidence-based prevention and intervention behavioral strategies that help schools define, teach and support appropriate student behaviors in positive school culture. Data is used to provide insight to the problem-solving process.
In PCS, PBIS is not fully implemented until it is culturally responsive.1 Culturally Responsive PBIS systems (CR-PBIS) are uniquely designed to fit the cultural backgrounds of the individuals they serve. This approach sometimes requires educators to change how they think about, support and address student behavior. CR-PBIS systems are characterized by:2
Additionally, schools that have effectively implemented PBIS implement the following processes: 3

MULTI-TIERED SYSTEM OF SUPPORTS (MTSS)
Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS) is a term used to describe an evidence-based schooling model that uses data-based problem-solving to integrate academic and behavioral instruction and intervention. The integrated instruction and intervention is delivered to students in varying intensities (multiple tiers) based on student need. “Need-driven” decision-making seeks to ensure that district resources reach the appropriate students (schools) at the appropriate levels to accelerate the performance of ALL students to achieve and exceed proficiency. Within the MTSS framework, the learning rate over time and performance level are used to inform instructional decisions. The problem-solving/response to intervention (PS/RtI) component of MTSS is required in the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEA 2004). Problem-solving and measuring the response to intervention through progress monitoring ensure the quality and validity of classroom instruction. In an effective Multi-Tiered System of Supports: Learning is accelerated to close gaps and prevent new ones.
In an effective Multi-Tiered System of Supports:
Center on Multi-Tiered Systems of Support https://mtss4success.org/
For more information on the problem-solving process and multi-level prevention system, which includes a continuum (Tiers 1, 2, and 3) of integrated academic, social, emotional, and behavioral instructional and intervention supports that are evidence-based and culturally and linguistically responsive, please visit the MTSS Center and Florida’s MTSS. PCS MTSS Handbook, MTSS Center (link above) and Florida’s MTSS
1 Leverson, M., Smith, K., McIntosh, K., Rose, J., & Pinkelman, S., (November 2016)
2 Culturally-Responsive PBIS - Florida PBIS Project. http://flpbis.cbcs.usf.edu/foundations/CR-PBIS.html
3 Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports - VTSS RIC .... https://vtss-ric.vcu.edu/all-educators/positive-behavioral-interventions-and-supports/