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BRIDGE: Attendance & Behaviour Self-Review Framework

Introduction to Attendance & Behaviour Review

Attendance and behaviour are the daily conditions that make learning possible. They reflect routines, relationships, and a shared belief that every pupil belongs in the classroom and can learn well. Drawing on the Behaviour and Attitudes area of the Ofsted inspection toolkit (our reference point for structure and language) and adapted for বাংলাদেশ, this section focuses on practical, non-judgemental ways to strengthen consistency, safety, and engagement across school life.

দ্য BRIDGE Attendance & Behaviour Framework helps schools in Bangladesh review and improve culture and practice through six connected clusters:

Attendance Monitoring & Support – tracking attendance carefully and offering timely help to pupils who are frequently absent.
Punctuality & Engagement in Learning – encouraging pupils to arrive on time and take an active, purposeful role in lessons.
Behaviour Expectations & Consistency – applying clear, fair expectations in a consistent way across classrooms and staff.
Relationships & Classroom Climate – building respectful relationships that support emotional safety and positive participation.
Dropout Prevention & Re-Engagement – identifying pupils at risk of leaving school early and finding ways to keep them learning.
Positive Behaviour Approaches – using encouragement, restorative responses, and recognition to reinforce good behaviour.

How to Use This Review

These clusters are designed for honest, evidence-based reflection. Use them flexibly to suit your context:

  • Start with the cluster that aligns with your current priorities (e.g., punctuality, re-engagement, or classroom climate).
  • Involve teaching and non-teaching staff — attendance and behaviour are whole-school responsibilities.
  • Combine findings into a single improvement plan that connects wellbeing, engagement, and outcomes.

Each cluster includes:
🔎 Evidence Review – what the cluster means and why it matters.
🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables) – essential practices that drive improvement.
🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions – prompts for staff discussion and reflection.
📊 Exemplar Table – a practical model for recording evidence and next steps.
📥 Download Template – a Word version you can adapt to your school.

Principles for Meaningful Review

  • Attendance shows belonging. Pupils attend more when routines are predictable and relationships are respectful.
  • Consistency builds trust. Clear expectations, applied fairly, help everyone feel safe and ready to learn.
  • Prevention over punishment. Positive, relationship-based approaches lead to longer-lasting improvements.
  • Shared ownership. Pupils, families, teachers, and leaders all contribute to a calm, purposeful learning environment.

Together, these clusters support schools to strengthen the everyday habits that keep pupils present, engaged, and thriving — step by step, towards classrooms in Bangladesh that are calm, inclusive, and full of learning.

Cluster 1. Attendance Monitoring & Support

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Attendance monitoring and support refer to how well schools track pupil attendance, identify emerging patterns of absence, and respond quickly with help rather than punishment.

Regular attendance reflects belonging, safety, and motivation. When pupils attend consistently, they build routines, friendships, and continuity in learning.

In Bangladesh, attendance issues can stem from illness, financial hardship, transport challenges, or family responsibilities. Effective monitoring combines accurate data with care — understanding কেন absences happen and working with families to remove barriers.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Learning continuity: Even short absences create learning gaps that can widen over time (OECD, 2021).

ইকুইটি: Disadvantaged pupils, girls, and those with disabilities are more likely to miss school — targeted support helps close opportunity gaps (UNESCO, 2023).

Early intervention: Quick contact with parents prevents small issues from becoming persistent patterns (DfE, 2022).

Local relevance: In Bangladesh, CAMPE (2021) and BRAC IED (2022) found that regular attendance tracking linked with community outreach improved retention and completion rates.

School culture: Supportive monitoring signals that every pupil’s presence matters.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Accurate and Timely Attendance Data (click to expand)

What it is: Reliable, daily systems to record attendance and identify trends early.

What it looks like in schools: Registers completed promptly; weekly reviews of class and group data; leaders track patterns and outliers.

Why it matters (Evidence): OECD (2021) and CAMPE (2021) show that accurate, consistent data helps schools act before absences become persistent.

2) Clear Thresholds and Early Response (click to expand)

What it is: Defined attendance thresholds that trigger swift, supportive action.

What it looks like in schools: Attendance below 90% prompts a call home; below 80% leads to a meeting or support plan.

Why it matters (Evidence): EEF (2021) found that structured response systems improve consistency and reduce chronic absence.

3) Family and Community Engagement (click to expand)

What it is: Collaboration with parents, guardians, and community partners to overcome attendance barriers.

What it looks like in schools: Home visits, parent meetings, community volunteers, or NGO partnerships.

Why it matters (Evidence): BRAC (2020) found that community-based monitoring improved daily attendance by 8–10% in pilot areas.

4) Supportive, Not Punitive, Intervention (click to expand)

What it is: Responding to absence with understanding and tailored support.

What it looks like in schools: Mentoring, counselling, catch-up lessons, or short-term adjustments for families in difficulty.

Why it matters (Evidence): UNICEF (2022) reports that supportive re-engagement improves attendance and pupil wellbeing more effectively than punishment.

5) Recognition of Good and Improved Attendance (click to expand)

What it is: Celebrating consistent and improving attendance as a shared achievement.

What it looks like in schools: Certificates, “attendance champions,” or class shout-outs focused on improvement, not perfection.

Why it matters (Evidence): Dweck (2006) and BRAC IED (2023) highlight that recognising growth builds intrinsic motivation and belonging.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • How accurate and up to date are our attendance records?
  • Do we review attendance patterns weekly or termly, and by which pupil groups?
  • What happens when attendance starts to drop — is there a clear and supportive response?
  • How do we involve parents or community partners in addressing barriers?
  • How do we celebrate and sustain improved attendance?

📊 Exemplar Table — Green Valley High

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Accuracy of Data Registers completed daily; mismatches between paper and digital logs noted. Streamline data entry; assign weekly review to attendance coordinator.
Early Response No standard follow-up trigger; action varies between teachers. Introduce consistent thresholds (90% phone call, 80% meeting); review fortnightly.
Family Engagement Parent contact recorded inconsistently; limited home visits. Schedule monthly parent review; use local volunteers for follow-up visits.
Supportive Intervention Absence often met with warnings; few structured supports offered. Develop short support plans; provide mentoring for returning pupils.
Recognition Only perfect attendance rewarded; improvement not recognised. Introduce “Most Improved Attendance” certificates; celebrate class attendance milestones.

📥 Download Word Template — Attendance Monitoring & Support

Cluster 2. Punctuality & Engagement in Learning

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Punctuality and engagement focus on pupils arriving on time and taking an active role in lessons from the first minute to the last. It is about predictable routines, smooth lesson starts, and teaching that invites participation from all learners.

In Bangladesh, late arrival can be influenced by traffic, transport, weather, or family responsibilities. Calm, consistent routines — paired with engaging lesson openings — help pupils settle quickly and make the most of learning time.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Maximising learning time: Prompt starts and active participation reduce lost minutes and build momentum for learning.

Equity and inclusion: Clear routines support all pupils, including those who are shy, new to the language of instruction, or returning after absence.

Classroom climate: Predictable expectations and engaging strategies improve focus, reduce low-level disruption, and increase confidence.

Home–school partnership: Simple communication with families about start times, equipment, and routines supports punctual habits.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Clear Start-of-Day and Start-of-Lesson Routines (click to expand)

What it is: Predictable entry routines so learning begins immediately.

What it looks like in schools: Bell work/“Do Now”, visible learning objective, equipment check, and quick register while pupils start a short task.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Smooth beginnings reduce lateness impact, calm the room, and signal that every minute counts.

2) Punctuality Tracking & Rapid Follow-Up (click to expand)

What it is: Simple systems to record late arrivals and respond consistently.

What it looks like in schools: Weekly punctuality report; gentle conversation for first incidents; repeated lateness triggers a short plan with pupil and parent.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Early, supportive action prevents patterns, keeps expectations fair, and builds routines.

3) High-Participation Teaching Routines (click to expand)

What it is: Strategies that involve প্রতি pupil, not just volunteers.

What it looks like in schools: Think–pair–share, cold-calling/no-hands-up, mini whiteboards, quick retrieval questions, and clear turn-and-talk prompts.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Structured participation builds confidence, checks understanding, and sustains attention across the class.

4) Readiness to Learn: Space, Seating, & Equipment (click to expand)

What it is: Removing small barriers so pupils can begin promptly.

What it looks like in schools: Seating plans, tidy spaces, spare pens/books, clear movement routines, and roles for monitors.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Practical readiness prevents minutes being lost and supports pupils who may lack resources at home.

5) Family Communication & Positive Recognition (click to expand)

What it is: Working with families to build punctual habits and celebrating improvement.

What it looks like in schools: SMS reminders of start times, brief calls for repeated lateness, certificates for excellent or improved punctuality.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Positive contact strengthens habits and keeps messages consistent between home and school.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • How consistent are our start-of-day and start-of-lesson routines across classes?
  • Do we track punctuality and follow up early in a supportive, fair way?
  • Which participation routines are embedded so that all pupils are actively involved?
  • Have we removed practical barriers (seating, equipment, room layout) that slow starts?
  • How do we communicate with families about punctuality and recognise improvement?

📊 Exemplar Table — Green Valley High

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Lesson Starts Bell work used in some classes; objectives not always visible. Adopt a shared “first 5 minutes” routine; display objective every lesson.
Punctuality Tracking Late arrivals recorded inconsistently; no weekly overview. Create a simple weekly report; agree early-response steps with staff.
Participation Routines Hands-up dominates questioning; uneven engagement observed. Train staff in cold-calling and mini whiteboards; monitor use in learning walks.
Readiness to Learn Lost time finding books/pens; cluttered walkways in two rooms. Provide spare equipment; refresh seating plans; tidy and mark clear pathways.
Family & Recognition Parents informed only after repeated lateness; no recognition system. Send SMS reminders; introduce “On-Time Champion” and “Most Improved” awards.

📥 Download Word Template — Punctuality & Engagement in Learning

Cluster 3. Behaviour Expectations & Consistency

Applying clear, fair expectations in a consistent way across classrooms and staff.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Behaviour expectations and consistency describe how a school sets clear, fair standards for conduct and learning routines — and how reliably adults apply them. It is less about rules themselves and more about predictable habits that make classrooms calm, safe, and focused.

In Bangladesh, busy classrooms and varied local contexts benefit from simple, shared routines (entry, seating, equipment, transitions) that every teacher uses. Consistency helps pupils know what to do, lowers anxiety, and reduces low-level disruption.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Safety & fairness: Clear, consistently applied expectations support emotional safety and a sense of justice.

Learning time: Predictable routines reduce lost minutes and keep attention on learning.

ইকুইটি: Consistency prevents unconscious bias — pupils experience the same expectations whoever is teaching.

Whole-school culture: When staff respond in similar ways, pupils trust the system and behaviour improves across the site.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Clear, Visible Standards & Routines (click to expand)

What it is: A short set of positively phrased expectations and everyday routines used in every class.

What it looks like in schools: Posted classroom expectations; “first 5 minutes” routine; calm signal for attention; shared procedures for movement, equipment, and group work.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Visibility and simplicity help pupils remember and follow expectations without repeated reminders.

2) Consistent Adult Responses to Behaviour (click to expand)

What it is: A common step-by-step approach for correcting behaviour, used by all staff.

What it looks like in schools: Non-verbal cue → brief reminder → choice with consequence → follow-up conversation. Escalation is calm, fair, and proportionate.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Predictable responses reduce confrontation and ensure pupils experience fairness across classes.

3) Teaching Behaviour Explicitly (Teach, Practise, Reinforce) (click to expand)

What it is: Treating behaviour as a curriculum — modelling, rehearsing, and positively reinforcing routines.

What it looks like in schools: Start-of-term modelling; quick “reset” practices after holidays; praise for specific behaviours (e.g., “Thank you for tracking the speaker”).

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Pupils learn expectations faster and are more likely to meet them when they are taught explicitly, not assumed.

4) Proportionate Consequences & Restorative Follow-Up (click to expand)

What it is: Responses that fit the behaviour and include opportunities to repair relationships and re-enter learning.

What it looks like in schools: Short, instructional consequences (catch-up work, re-practice routine) plus brief restorative chats focused on impact and next steps.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Repair keeps relationships strong and prevents repeat incidents; proportionate steps maintain trust.

5) Staff Calibration & Support (Walkthroughs & Coaching) (click to expand)

What it is: Time for staff to align practice and get practical help with routines.

What it looks like in schools: Short learning walks; shared language for corrections; peer coaching; quick debriefs after challenging incidents.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Adults stay consistent, confident, and supported — especially new teachers or substitutes.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • Are our behaviour expectations few, clear, positive, and visible in every room?
  • Do all staff use the same step-by-step response to misbehaviour?
  • How often do we teach and rehearse routines (entry, transitions, equipment, attention signals)?
  • Are consequences proportionate and followed by brief restorative conversations?
  • How do we calibrate practice (walkthroughs, coaching) so pupils experience consistency across classes?

📊 Exemplar Table — Green Valley High

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Clarity of Expectations Posters vary by room; routines not displayed in several classes. Create a one-page “Our Classroom Routines”; display in all rooms; revisit with students.
Consistency of Responses Different sanctions/language between teachers for similar behaviours. Agree a 4-step response; provide cue cards; align language used for reminders.
Teaching Routines Expectations told but rarely practised with students. Schedule termly routine practice; embed 3-minute “reset” after long breaks.
Proportionate & Restorative Consequences sometimes escalate quickly; few repair conversations. Adopt short instructional consequences; train staff in 2-minute restorative chats.
Staff Calibration Limited peer observation or coaching around behaviour. Introduce fortnightly micro-walkthroughs; pair new staff with mentors for routines.

📥 Download Word Template — Behaviour Expectations & Consistency

Cluster 4. Relationships & Classroom Climate

Building respectful relationships that support emotional safety and positive participation.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Relationships and classroom climate describe how teachers and pupils interact day to day — how respect, trust, and belonging are built through tone, language, and care. It is about ensuring that every learner feels noticed, valued, and safe to participate.

In Bangladesh, where classrooms are often large and formal, small relational actions — greeting pupils by name, noticing effort, offering calm redirection — can have a powerful effect. A positive climate is not created by being “soft,” but by combining warmth with structure and fairness.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Learning & motivation: Students learn best when they feel safe, respected, and part of a community (OECD, 2021).

Behaviour & participation: Positive relationships reduce conflict and increase engagement, particularly for pupils at risk of disengagement.

Teacher wellbeing: Supportive classroom climates also reduce teacher stress and burnout (DfE, 2022; BRAC IED, 2023).

Local relevance: Studies from BRAC and CAMPE (2022) show that schools emphasising mutual respect and kindness saw better attendance and fewer dropouts.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Respectful Language & Tone from All Adults (click to expand)

What it is: Calm, courteous communication that models the respect expected from pupils.

What it looks like in schools: Teachers greet pupils warmly; instructions are clear and polite; corrections are calm and private where possible.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Respectful tone builds trust and sets a positive emotional tone for learning.

2) Emotional Safety & Psychological Belonging (click to expand)

What it is: Ensuring every pupil feels included, supported, and safe to speak, ask, and make mistakes.

What it looks like in schools: Teachers use names; praise effort; normalise mistakes; monitor peer interactions to prevent teasing or exclusion.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: When pupils feel secure, they take learning risks, engage more deeply, and recover from setbacks faster.

3) Positive Teacher Presence & Classroom Culture (click to expand)

What it is: The teacher’s calm authority and positive energy shaping how pupils feel and behave in class.

What it looks like in schools: Use of eye contact, proximity, and consistent routines; praise before correction; moving around the room to maintain connection.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Presence communicates care and confidence, setting the tone for cooperation and focus.

4) Peer Relationships & Cooperative Learning (click to expand)

What it is: Structuring collaboration so pupils learn with and from each other respectfully.

What it looks like in schools: Mixed-ability pairings, clear group roles, and norms for listening and turn-taking; small group reflection on teamwork.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Pupils develop empathy, leadership, and communication — skills linked to improved learning outcomes and social cohesion.

5) Feedback that Builds Agency & Hope (click to expand)

What it is: Feedback that helps pupils see mistakes as part of growth, not failure.

What it looks like in schools: Teachers highlight effort and strategies (“You improved your paragraph by using more evidence”) rather than fixed traits.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Growth-oriented feedback fosters resilience and optimism, particularly for pupils under exam pressure.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • How do adults in our school model respectful language and calm tone?
  • Do pupils feel safe to ask questions and make mistakes in front of others?
  • How consistent is teacher presence — calm, fair, and encouraging — across classrooms?
  • Are peer relationships and group learning structured to build cooperation and respect?
  • Does our feedback promote hope, agency, and motivation, not fear of failure?

📊 Exemplar Table — Green Valley High

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Respectful Language Lesson observations: most teachers use polite tone; a few use raised voices when correcting. Introduce “calm correction” strategies; share examples in weekly briefing.
Emotional Safety Student interviews: some afraid to answer questions in front of class. Normalise mistakes through teacher modelling; use think–pair–share before whole-class answers.
Teacher Presence Effective routines in some classes; others rely on reactive reminders. Peer coaching on presence and routines; use video reflection for volunteers.
Peer Relationships Group tasks observed but limited structure for cooperation. Train staff on cooperative learning norms; assign group roles and reflections.
Feedback & Agency Feedback often focuses on correctness rather than progress. Adopt growth-focused marking policy; use “one next step” comments in written work.

📥 Download Word Template — Relationships & Classroom Climate

Cluster 5. Dropout Prevention & Re-Engagement

Identifying pupils at risk of leaving school early and finding ways to keep them learning.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Dropout prevention and re-engagement focus on recognising early warning signs — irregular attendance, low participation, poor progress — and taking action before pupils leave school. It’s about helping every learner stay connected to education, whatever challenges they face.

In Bangladesh, dropout is influenced by a mix of social and economic factors: family pressure, financial hardship, early marriage, migration, or lack of transport. Schools that notice patterns early, maintain communication with families, and offer flexible support are best placed to prevent loss of learning.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Equity & inclusion: Reducing dropout helps ensure that no group of pupils — especially girls or those from rural areas — are left behind.

National impact: Reducing early school leaving improves workforce readiness and supports national development priorities (BANBEIS, 2023).

Human potential: Each retained learner represents a life opportunity — education reduces vulnerability to exploitation, child labour, and long-term poverty (UNICEF, 2022).

Local evidence: BRAC Education Programme (2021) found that schools maintaining active outreach reduced dropout by up to 30% through early contact and flexible re-entry options.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Early Identification & Monitoring (click to expand)

What it is: Using attendance, participation, and progress data to identify at-risk pupils early.

What it looks like in schools: Weekly attendance tracking; alert lists for repeated absences; teachers flag disengagement during staff meetings.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Early notice allows schools to act before absence becomes permanent withdrawal.

2) Family & Community Communication (click to expand)

What it is: Building trust with parents and community members to understand causes of absence and co-create solutions.

What it looks like in schools: Friendly home visits, phone calls in the local language, parent meetings with empathy not blame.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Strong partnerships help families see education as shared responsibility rather than school alone.

3) Flexible Support Pathways (click to expand)

What it is: Providing adaptable options to keep pupils learning when attendance is disrupted.

What it looks like in schools: Catch-up classes, peer tutoring, mentoring, or part-time learning linked with community centres or NGOs.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Flexibility keeps education accessible for those facing complex personal or family circumstances.

4) Re-Engagement after Absence (click to expand)

What it is: Welcoming pupils back positively and helping them rebuild confidence and routine.

What it looks like in schools: Re-entry meeting with teacher; buddy support; short “catch-up” plan; public encouragement, not punishment.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: How pupils are treated on return often determines whether they stay or leave again.

5) Multi-Agency Partnerships (click to expand)

What it is: Linking with social workers, NGOs, and local authorities to address wider barriers.

What it looks like in schools: Referral networks for financial support, counselling, transport, or vocational options.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Complex dropout causes require joint solutions beyond what a single school can provide.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • How do we track and identify pupils showing early signs of disengagement?
  • What systems ensure supportive follow-up with families, not punitive messaging?
  • Do we offer flexible learning or catch-up options for pupils with irregular attendance?
  • How are returning pupils welcomed and supported to rebuild confidence?
  • Which community or NGO partners could strengthen our re-engagement work?

📊 Exemplar Table — Green Valley High

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Early Identification Attendance data kept but not reviewed for trends; limited link to academic records. Develop weekly alert report combining attendance and grades; assign staff lead for review.
Family Communication Calls made after long absence only; language barriers noted with some families. Train staff for early, empathetic outreach; use local language and community liaison.
Flexible Support No structured catch-up provision; students depend on peers informally. Introduce weekly catch-up club and peer mentoring system.
Re-Engagement Returning pupils treated as “behind” rather than welcomed back. Adopt positive re-entry protocol; create welcome meetings and buddy support.
Partnerships Limited awareness of NGO programmes supporting at-risk learners. Map local NGOs (BRAC, CAMPE, UCEP); establish referral process for high-risk pupils.

📥 Download Word Template — Dropout Prevention & Re-Engagement

Cluster 6. Positive Behaviour Approaches

Using encouragement, restorative responses, and recognition to reinforce good behaviour.

🔎 Evidence Review

What this means (click to expand)

Positive behaviour approaches prioritise encouragement, clear routines, and restorative follow-up so that pupils learn how to behave well, not just what to avoid. The emphasis is on teaching and reinforcing the behaviours that help learning — attention, kindness, persistence — and repairing relationships when things go wrong.

Aligned to the Behaviour and Attitudes area of the Ofsted toolkit and adapted for Bangladesh, this approach recognises that praise that is specific, consequences that are proportionate, and conversations that focus on repair build safer, calmer classrooms over time.

কেন এটা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ (click to expand)

Better learning: Classrooms with high rates of positive reinforcement see more on-task behaviour and participation.

Fairness & dignity: Restorative follow-up helps pupils understand impact and re-enter learning respectfully.

Teacher wellbeing: Predictable, positive systems reduce stress and the need for escalation.

Local relevance: In Bangladesh’s busy classrooms, brief, consistent routines and positive recognition are practical, time-efficient, and sustainable.


🧪 Active Ingredients (Non-Negotiables)

1) Specific Praise & Positive Ratios (click to expand)

What it is: Frequent, specific acknowledgement of the behaviours we want to see (e.g., “Thank you for starting quickly; your book is ready”).

What it looks like in schools: Aim for more positive than corrective interactions; notice effort and improvement, not only outcomes.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Clear positive cues guide habits, build confidence, and make expectations visible for every pupil.

2) Pre-Correction & Practice of Routines (click to expand)

What it is: Brief reminders before transitions plus short practice to make the right behaviour easy.

What it looks like in schools: “In a moment you’ll move to groups; voice at 1, books closed, walk not run.” Rehearse quickly after holidays or when routines slip.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Prevention reduces low-level disruption and keeps learning time intact.

3) Restorative Conversations & Repair (click to expand)

What it is: Short, structured conversations that focus on impact, responsibility, and next steps.

What it looks like in schools: 2–3 minute chat: “What happened? Who was affected? How do we fix it? What will you do next time?”

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Repair preserves relationships, teaches empathy, and supports successful re-entry to learning.

4) Simple Recognition Systems (Individual & Class) (click to expand)

What it is: Light-touch ways to notice and celebrate positive behaviour and improvement.

What it looks like in schools: Postcards home, points, “Golden Minutes,” class goals, and certificates for improvement, not just perfection.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Recognition builds belonging and motivates sustained effort across diverse learners.

5) Consistent Language & Data-Informed Tweaks (click to expand)

What it is: Shared scripts for encouragement/correction and simple tracking to spot patterns and hotspots.

What it looks like in schools: Common phrases for reminders; brief logs of positives and corrections; leaders review trends and adjust routines.

কেন এটি গুরুত্বপূর্ণ: Consistency across staff feels fair to pupils; light data use helps improve over time without paperwork overload.


🧭 Self-Evaluation Questions

  • Do we give specific praise frequently enough to make expectations visible?
  • Are pre-corrections and quick practice routines used before transitions?
  • Do staff use short restorative conversations to repair and re-engage after incidents?
  • Is our recognition simple, fair, and focused on improvement as well as excellence?
  • Do we use common language and light data to keep approaches consistent across classes?

📊 Exemplar Table — Green Valley High

Evaluation Question Evidence we looked at Reflection / Next Steps
Specific Praise Observations show general praise (“good job”); few behaviour-specific examples. Adopt specific praise scripts; aim for a higher positive:corrective ratio.
Pre-Correction Transitions cause noise and lost time; reminders happen after disruption. Introduce pre-correction prompts before movements; practise at the start of term.
Restorative Repair Incidents resolved with sanctions only; limited follow-up conversation. Train staff in 3-question restorative chats; log repair completed.
Recognition Systems Rewards focus on top performers; little for steady improvement. Add “Most Improved” and class goals; send weekly positive messages to families.
Consistency & Data Different language and thresholds between classes; no trend review. Agree shared scripts; track positives/corrections by week; review hotspots in briefing.

📥 Download Word Template — Positive Behaviour Approaches

Conclusion – From Reflection to Action

দ্য BRIDGE Attendance & Behaviour framework helps leaders and teachers see the full picture of everyday culture — from Attendance Monitoring & Support এবং Punctuality & Engagement থেকে Behaviour Expectations & Consistency, Relationships & Classroom Climate, Dropout Prevention & Re-Engagement, এবং Positive Behaviour Approaches. Each cluster offers a calm, practical lens for understanding what is working, where barriers remain, and which small steps will make school feel safer, kinder, and more purposeful for every learner.

Every school is different. Use these clusters flexibly: one team might focus on punctual starts and participation, while another strengthens re-engagement pathways or staff consistency. What matters is that reflection stays collaborative, non-judgemental, and evidence-rich — grounded in registers, simple behaviour logs, classroom observation, and conversations with pupils and families.

🧭 Guiding prompts for your team

  • Which pupils or groups are not yet fully benefiting from our routines and support, and what evidence shows this?
  • Which barriers can we remove quickly (arrival routines, seating, equipment, communication), and which require longer-term partnership or investment?
  • How will we know change is helping pupils — in attendance, punctuality, engagement, and calm, respectful conduct?
  • What will we start, stop, and continue in the next six weeks? Who is responsible, and how will we review progress together?

Explore the six clusters, gather your evidence, and agree two or three clear next actions. Step by step, each reflection moves your school — and every learner — closer to a culture of belonging, consistency, and confident participation in classrooms across Bangladesh.