See also UW’s Conduct Code: University Standards for Interacting with Youth, which must be used by UW youth activity leaders with their employees and volunteers
Youth Participant Conduct Codes serve multiple purposes:
- For participants: They provide a clear roadmap for success, outlining expected behaviors, prohibited actions, and consequences for rule violations.
- For parents/guardians: They offer guidance on how to support their child’s participation and reinforce key program policies.
- For personnel: They act as a reference tool for addressing behavior issues consistently and objectively, using predefined expectations and consequences.
Note: These tools are only effective when actively used. It’s important to follow through when a participant or parent/guardian does not meet the agreed-upon expectations.
What to Include in a Participant Conduct Code
A well-written conduct code should:
- State the program’s purpose in brief.
- Include sections for participants, parents/guardians, and personnel, with required signatures from all three groups.
- Define expected behaviors and clearly list prohibited actions, including those that may result in dismissal.
- Highlight key policies for parents/guardians, along with guidance on how to support their child’s success.
- Outline a process for addressing violations, including steps and consequences.
How to Incorporate the Conduct Code into Your Program
- Customize the code to reflect your program’s tone, values, and expectations.
- Integrate it into intake or orientation, and collect signed copies before the program begins.
- Embed signatures or initials throughout the document to encourage thorough reading.
- Train personnel on the code and their role in enforcing it.
- Provide corrective action templates and discuss how to use them.
- Clarify personnel responsibilities for handling behavior issues (e.g., who can give warnings vs. who can dismiss a participant).
- Use scenarios to practice applying stepwise corrective actions.
- Establish internal documentation protocols for incidents and personnel responses.
- Reinforce conduct expectations throughout the program:
- With younger youth, use themes like listen, communicate, participate, respect through songs, games, or mini-lessons.
- With older youth, co-create group agreements to complement the conduct code and promote shared ownership.
Sample Participant Conduct Codes
Elementary-aged youth
- Standard model policy [.docx]
- Online/Virtual Interactions model policy [.docx]
Teen-aged youth
- Standard model policy [.docx]
- Online/Virtual Interactions model policy [.docx]