What Students Need: A Story from Brevard Elementary
It began with a question. Not a compliance question or a curriculum question, but a deeper one. Staff at Brevard Elementary School were asked to consider:
“What do students need to become their most successful selves?”
The answers did not come all at once. They surfaced gradually, shaped by experience, frustration, and hope. Teachers spoke about effort, ownership, relationships, and resilience. Over time, these ideas began to take form as a shared set of commitments that would become the Foundations of Success.
Before the language was finalized, the team reached a point of tension. The conversation narrowed to a single choice: kindness or empathy. At first, the distinction felt subtle. Both mattered, and both were visible in classrooms. But the more the staff talked, the more it became clear that the decision was not just about wording. It was about direction. What they chose would signal what they believed students truly needed, especially when learning felt difficult.
Rather than resolve the question alone, the team invited students into the process. A student leadership group was asked to weigh in, not as a formality, but as contributors. During that conversation, one student offered a perspective that shifted the room:
“To show empathy, you have to be kind. Kindness is basic. Empathy is what we need.”
The statement was simple and direct, but it clarified the work. Kindness was not dismissed. It was assumed. Empathy, however, required more. It asked students to understand, to consider perspective, and to respond with intention. It aligned with the kind of growth the school wanted to cultivate, not just the behavior it hoped to see.
Foundations of Success:
From that point, the Foundations of Success took shape:
- We show Respect
- We practice Perseverance
- We act with Responsibility
- We lead with Empathy
These are not intended to live on posters alone. They are beginning to show up in daily interactions across classrooms, hallways, and shared spaces. The work is early, and implementation is unfolding through cycles of training, practice, and reflection.
Teachers are starting to use shared language to name what they see in students. Praise is becoming more specific and more connected to values.
A student staying with a difficult task might be recognized for perseverance.
A student repairing a mistake might be acknowledged for responsibility.
These moments are not yet consistent, but they are becoming more intentional.
The Strategy: Give’m Five Framework
Alongside this, the school has introduced a structured approach to feedback and redirection. The Give’m Five framework, developed by Larry Thompson, is being practiced as a way to hold students accountable while maintaining strong relationships. Teachers are working to apply support, expectations, benefits, and closure in real time, learning what they look like in different situations and with different students.
Give’m Five is a structured approach to addressing student behavior while maintaining strong relationships and high expectations. Grounded in the decades-long work of Larry Thompson and his book Responsibility-Centered Discipline (RCD), it reflects a shift away from obedience-based discipline toward a model that centers student ownership of both behavior and learning. RCD recognizes that behavior and effort are closely tied to relationships, and when emotions escalate, those relationships are often tested. Give’m Five helps educators respond with clarity and consistency in those moments, keeping students engaged while reinforcing responsibility.
The framework moves through five parts:
Support
Expectation
Breakdown
Benefit
Closure
Together, these steps provide a way to address behavior without escalating it, helping students understand the impact of their actions and make better decisions moving forward. Schools implementing RCD have seen improvements in school climate, reductions in disciplinary referrals, and increased student ownership. Give’m Five builds the skills needed to navigate challenging moments in ways that strengthen both accountability and connection.
The Implementation: A Culture in Progress
A small team is helping to guide this work, testing what is effective, gathering feedback, and refining how these practices show up across the school. There is an understanding that this will not be implemented perfectly or all at once. It is being built through iteration.
Part of that learning includes recognizing that not every moment requires a full framework. Staff are beginning to calibrate their responses, using simple relational cues when appropriate and reserving more structured conversations for moments that require deeper reflection. Finding that balance is still in progress.
The shift at BES is grounded in a growing understanding of students and how they experience learning.
For many, academic struggle can feel like a threat. Mistakes can lead to withdrawal, and what appears as apathy is often a form of protection. In that context, rigor alone is not enough. Students need to feel safe enough to engage in the work.
This is where the balance between care and challenge becomes essential. BES is raising expectations. Students are still being asked to think deeply, persist through difficulty, and take ownership of their learning. What is changing is how the school is working to support them in meeting those expectations.
Empathy is not replacing accountability; it is helping make accountability possible.
The work is still developing. Teachers are practicing, reflecting, and adjusting. Some moments feel natural, while others require more thought and intention. The language is becoming more familiar, and the direction is increasingly shared.
What is taking shape at Brevard Elementary is not a finished model, but an extension of an already powerful culture. Guided by an incredible administration and an experienced, educated staff, it is being built through daily decisions, small interactions, and a willingness to keep refining the work.
The question that started it all still remains, but it is now being answered in classrooms, one moment at a time.
