70%
decrease in student discipline referrals
2,200
students spending more time in class
160
teachers using and loving digital hall passes
Challenge
Decrease student referrals and increased student accountability
Camelback High School serves more than 2,200 students from across the Phoenix valley in Arizona. Students are drawn to the school because it offers almost every sport you can think of, as well as more than 60 clubs and the most dual enrollment courses of any high school in the district. They stay, though, because of the school's supportive and affirming culture, and its longstanding reputation for providing a learning environment where every student can make it.
A Title 1 urban school, Camelback has a 10-person safety team led by a dedicated Assistant Principal of Student Support, as well as intervention specialists and social workers. Despite their strong team, the school was experiencing a high number of student referrals, an average of 10 per school day. Students were frequently leaving class and lacking personal accountability to stay and learn. Something had to change.
Solution
Gaining buy-in for a digital hall pass is easy, and it reduces referrals by a whopping 70%
Head principal, James Arndt, was hearing good things about a digital hall pass from some friends at another school, so he took his team to check it out. Once they saw it in action, James says he and his team "were amazed."
James says, "I think a lot of us have asked why there isn't a better way to do this. It seems like it should exist. So when we visited our friends, and we saw the Securly Pass dashboard showing every student with a hall pass and where they were going, we were like, 'Oh my God! This is the Holy Grail!' The team was immediately hooked."
James and his team didn't waste time moving forward. They quickly ruled out other options, including the digital hall pass included with their SIS. James explains, "We just didn't have a lot of faith in that option because, in our experience, that program hasn't worked super well. But when we saw a digital hall pass from Securly, we felt confident that a company that was started with student safety in mind would be the best at it."
The Camelback team found Securly Pass in the spring and implemented it over a four-month period leading up to the new school year in August. They committed to training because as James explains, they weren't just going to adopt it, they were going to be the best at it.
From there, James says the launch was "seamless," and getting buy-in was easy. "The Pass team worked very quickly with us to get things off the ground," he says. "When we showed our staff the dashboard, they were like 'This is great!' They loved how transparent and safe it is." He adds, "Teachers want this. It's not a hard sell. They want to feel safe. They want kids to be safe."
Speaking of data, James beams with pride when he shares the improvements he's seen. Comparing semesters from before Securly Pass to after, student referrals went from 858 to 290, a 70% decrease. "Just think about the mental health of your staff not having to process so much student discipline," he adds.
He also emphasizes the increased transparency and accountability since implementing Securly Pass. In his words, "It's not like our kids just suddenly saw the light. It's that we have removed the opportunity, because we've restricted the ability to just leave class. There's a higher accountability around staying in class and learning now, and that's a positive feedback loop.
The more kids are in class, the more they're interested in class. And the more they're interested in class, the more likely they are to learn. The more likely they are to learn, the more likely they are to stay in class."