Setup Center: Incident Codes

AdminPlus can track and report on a student’s disciplinary incidentsThe Incident Codes (referred to in classic as Discipline Codes) are organized in 5 tabs for each of the code types used in reporting an incident: Incident Codes (A), Action Codes (B), Action Summary Codes (C), Served Codes (D), and Location Codes (E). Incident Codes can be viewed and edited under Setup Center > Libraries > Incident Codes.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Diagram of Codes

Incident Codes
A
Incident Codes categorize the student behavior. See notes.
B
Action Codes are for the type of action taken based on the incident.  More notes.
C
Action Summary Codes (referred to as Penalty Codes in classic) are for reporting purposes to summarize the actions linked to Action Summary Codes. Learn more.
D
Served Codes are to track that the Action was applied. See notes.
E
Location Codes for reporting where the incident occurred and whether it occurred on school property. Learn More.
F
  • Send to Excel to export the table being viewed to Excel.
  • Print to print the table being viewed to Excel
G
Add New: Select to add a new Incident Code.
H
Sort: Click a column header to sort the data.  Once for ascending, twice for descending, a third time to return to the default Record # sort ascending.
I
Filter: Click the filter icon to filter the data.  A checkmark above the filter indicates a filter has been applied.
J
  • : Select to edit the existing code
  • : Select to delete the code.

Incident Codes

The Incident Codes, formerly known as Infraction Codes (in classic), directly describe and categorize the student behavior being reported. These codes represent the rule or policy that the student has broken, for example, Cheating or Violating the Dress Code.  It is made up of a 4-character code and a 40-character description. It can also be optionally linked to Default Actions based on Occurrences. For example, you can set up a code like Dress Code Violation to automatically link to actions that escalate in severity with occurrences from Verbal Warning to Suspension.  An Incident code does not need to have any default actions; actions may be chosen manually when entering an incident.  

Setting up default actions that represent your printed policies helps to not only expedite data entry but also helps to ensure a consistent and fair application of the policies. This is because default actions will automatically add the action when choosing specific incidents. 

An Incident Code may NOT start with a number, but it may contain a number

Action Codes

These codes represent the responses that the school administration will or did take to remediate the incident. An Action Code in turn can be used to accumulate (add to) Action Summary Codes. Like the Incident Codes, an Action Code is made up of a 4-character unique code and a 40-character description. These codes can be tracked or “summarized” by the Action Summary code that it links to. An Action Code need not be linked to a Summary Code. For example, a Verbal Warning action code can simply be an action that is not summarized by a summary code. Typically, you link an Action Code to an Action Summary Code when you want to track Outstanding/Total actions taken. For example, a Detention Action code is tracked by a Detention Summary Action Code, so that you can track outstanding/total Detentions. This also allows for an Attendance List to be printed.

The Amount should represent the "units" that your school uses. For example, a Detention may represent a 1-hour unit or period of time, whereas a Suspension may represent an amount of 1 day of time. 

Action Summary Codes

These are used to track and summarize the Action Codes. These codes, like Attendance Summary Codes, are broad and many Action Codes can and often will be linked to them. You can only have 8 Action Summary Codes. Typically, you need and want an Action Summary Code for any disciplinary actions that require a student to “participate” in an owed action and or that you want an attendance list for. The typical examples of this could include After School Detention, Special Saturday Detentions, etc. The codes are again four characters long with a forty-character character description (and codes may not start with a number). 

Served Codes

These codes are used to balance (or reduce) the Action Summary Codes. Where Action codes are used to accumulate an amount owed, Served Codes reduce that amount and are used to credit the student who served an action.  For example, a student was written up for an incident, and the action taken was to assign a Detention. The Action would be linked to an Action Summary Code, indicating the student has an Outstanding Detention. The Served code would be used to credit the student when the Detention Action has been completed thus marking it as served and reducing the Action Summary by the amount.  

Served codes should reflect how your policies realistically carry out the actions. You need not have a 1:1 relationship between your Action and Served codes. For example, you may have Action Codes that can assign an amount of 3 to 5 Detentions. You need not have Served Codes that credits a student for 3 to 5 Detentions at once, especially if they are served one at a time and never three or more at a time.

Location Codes

These are optional codes that can be used when entering an Incident into AdminPlus to indicate where an incident took place. You should customize this list to represent your campus and or school day. Codes can be used in conjunction with one another to indicate both a place and a time. 

By having time or periods of the day in your Location Codes in addition to physical locations, you can use them to help indicate both when and where an incident has taken place. For example, “before school” and “parking lot” can be used together on an incident to indicate that the incident happened in the school parking lot before school.  

Custom Incident Category Tables

If your school has a policy or needs to add additional information to an incident that is not covered by the codes, please refer to Custom Incident Category Tables. These special tables allow for additional incident fields of data, for example, Victims, Admin Remarks, and more. 

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