Penikese Island School
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a remote family setting for the rehabilitation of troubled teens

FAQ for Agencies & Schools

General FAQ | FAQ for Students | FAQ for Parents

What is Penikese? Penikese is a small therapeutic boarding school for boys aged 15-18.

Where is Penikese? The school is located on 75-acre Penikese Island 12 miles southwest of Woods Hole, Massachusetts at the end of the Elizabeth Island chain.

How much is Penikese’s tuition? Penikese’s tuition, set by Massachusetts’ Operational Services Division (OSD) is $329.90 a day or $120,413,49 for a full year, although most placements last between 6 and 9 months.

What is Penikese’s accreditation and licensure? Penikese is accredited by Massachusetts’ Department of Education (DOE) as a special needs school. Penikese’s 2004 full-cycle review can be viewed at the Mass. DOE website. Penikese is licensed by the Department of Early Education and Care (DEEC) as a substitute care facility. Penikese is a member of Massachusetts Association of Accredited Chapter 766 Private Schools (www.maaps.org) and the National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs, (www.natsap.org).

When is the school open? Penikese is open 365 days a year and accepts students on a rolling admissions basis.

Does Penikese have a brochure? Yes, you can download a PDF of Penikese’s brochure by clicking here.

Who do I contact to make a referral?
Contact Clinical Director Pam Brighton at 508.548.7276, x 205 or .

How does Penikese meet the educational needs of its students?
Penikese’s singular focus in the classroom is to help its students overcome whatever barriers they have had to learning and experience academic success. Penikese’s certified special needs teachers are particularly adept at working with different student skill levels and needs, helped by Penikese’s small classroom size with typically no more than 3 or 4 students in the schoolhouse at any one time. Penikese works closely with parents and referring schools, and the boy’s IEP in formulating approaches tailored to the boy’s needs. Penikese’s students have generally fared well on the MCAS. For more information on Penikese’s academic program, download Penikese's Educational Program Profile here.

What do you do for medical care, especially when there is an emergency?
Penikese’s remote location demands that all students be in good health and that its staff have extra training in safety policy and procedure. When routine medical care is warranted, Penikese will bring the student on shore for treatment. In the event of time-critical emergencies, Penikese will contact Medivac via 911 and emergency responders on neighboring Cuttyhunk. If Medivac is grounded by weather, the Coast Guard will dispatch its own all-weather helicopter. Penikese has been commended by Massachusetts’ Department of Education for its safety policy and procedures.

Do you accept students on medication?
Penikese accepts students on medication for various behavior, attention and mood disorders, and dispenses them according to procedures monitored and approved by DOE and DEEC. For students on medications requiring blood level monitoring, Penikese will coordinate with the referring agency and parents to insure that the monitoring takes place. Penikese routinely consults with a pediatric psychiatrist for medication assessment, review, and adjustment. Penikese cannot accept students on medications requiring ongoing medical supervision and nursing care, such as for active psychosis. In cases where an antipsychotic medication has been prescribed as an atypical antidepressant, Penikese makes a case-by-case determination as to the referral’s appropriateness.

Do students get regular therapy?
All Penikese’s students receive individual therapy from the school’s state-licensed clinicians experienced in adolescent psychotherapy. However, Penikese understands the limitations of traditional talking therapies with adolescents and for these and other reasons, many of its students have failed to progress in the therapies they have had prior to coming to Penikese. Penikese therefore augments individual counseling with as many other approaches as possible, the most powerful of which include its group therapy experience, the Communication Program.

What other therapeutic approaches do you use?
Whether one on one, group, or in the here-and-now between staff and students working and living together, Penikese’s goal is for students to understand what they are feeling, put those feelings into words and talk to another person about them rather than act them out. Most often, this process occurs during the many teachable moments of any given day as staff give students feedback and their honest reaction about the impact their behavior has on them, and then offers alternate strategies for the student to get what they need and want from their relationships. Progress is achieved through modeling, practice and repetition, little different than parenting.

Do you have a behavior program, and if so, how does it work?
Yes, but rather than call it a behavior program, we prefer to refer to this as Penikese’s program structure. This element of Penikese is detailed in the Parent-Student Handbook. Penikese uses a point system to track student choices and progress through the day, with the point sheets themselves also serving as a record for review and reflection. Students must earn a certain number of points to make a green day; failing to do so earns them a red day, two or more of which in a two week period means that they failed to earn their home pass. These same points also earn the students pay at the rate 3 cents a point which, over the course of their enrollment, goes in to savings accounts toward graduation and their pockets as home pass take home. Penikese also uses a combination of monetary fines and redemptive community service as consequences, and these too are tied into home pass privileges.

How are student home visits handled, and what happens if things don’t go well?
Student home visits are the most important part of the program where students are expected to practice whatever improved skills and abilities they are learning on the island rather than pick up where they left off before Penikese. This does not mean, however, that there won’t be bumps along the way, opportunities for families and the student to learn to manage crisis and conflict on their own. All students must sign a homepass contract before being allowed to go on their home pass; these contracts begin restrictively but as students (and parents) succeed with each one their freedoms and expectations grow. Students failing to comply with their contract can lose their next home pass. Students have mandatory phone-ins with Penikese staff who are also available to counsel the parents if things aren’t going well. From time to time Penikese’s Outreach worker will visit the home to check in and lend some support. If circumstances warrant, the Outreach worker will bring the student back to Woods Hole to be transported back the island. Parents must complete a short home pass report form, and students are drug tested and searched for contraband upon their return.

What is the “ideal” referral profile for Penikese?
Although the potential success of any referral is difficult to predict, those meeting the following criteria tend to have the best success:

What kind of referral would be inappropriate for Penikese? Aside from lacking the above positive indicators, Penikese rules out referrals with the following characteristics: 

How does the school work with families? In a number of ways, the first of which is through “telephone” therapy where school and families become acquainted and share information and strategies. During the course of placement numerous meetings take place, sometimes in Woods Hole, the referring agency or school, and on the island. Penikese pays special attention to home visits, reviewing the contract and rehearsing scenarios and strategies with the family and the students beforehand and offering support when needed should conflicts arise. During the first few home visits, parents are encouraged to avoid power struggles with their visiting sons, play the role of score keeper, and let Penikese hold the students accountable. Over time and with progress, parents tend to take this role back over from the school and to the extent they are able signifies progress on all fronts.

What do you do to prepare students and their families for graduation and support them after? Aftercare is a critical part of the broad Penikese approach to rehabilitation, so much so that Penikese can be envisioned (and in fact is legally structured) as one school with two related components or stages, island placement and community services, including Aftercare. The Aftercare Director works with students and their families throughout the boys’ stay on the island to prepare them for successful transition from Life Skills and substance abuse assessment and relapse prevention to vocational training. The Director then builds on those relationships to maintain an influence in students’ lives long after graduation. Aftercare support can take many forms, from help with finding a job to visits back to the island.

How do parents, schools and agencies stay in contact with students, and can they visit him? Regular contact between the school, family and son is essential to placement success, and ongoing throughout his enrollment. The only time a parent ordinarily wouldn’t visit is during the student’s first 30 days, an important acclimatizing stage for the boy on the island and the family onshore. Sometime before the student’s first home pass the parents come out to Penikese see their son, have him show them around and for parents and son to review and rehearse with Penikese for the upcoming first home pass. Unless there is a compelling reason, students are not allowed to call home at first, and parents are encouraged to call and speak with school personnel as often as they need, a result of which parents become connected to and begin trusting the school, a process that grows in importance over time. Parents are also encouraged to write and send care packages (although there are guidelines, so check first!), and the students are encouraged to write home, too. Most are resistant at first but after a while the letters start a regular flow, transferred by mail pouch back and forth on the school’s vessel.

Are there physical restraints on Penikese? There are, but not many. When restraints do occur they tend to come in bunches and with one boy who might be acting out his anxieties and testing physical boundaries. For instance, it isn’t unusual to have no restraints during a three-month (or longer) period, and then have two or three in a few days before life settles back to normal. Part of the reason for this has to do with the island location: staff can tell a student to take a walk without having to worry too much about where he will go. Also, Penikese’s approach is to deemphasize behavioral control and “Because I told you so” staff attitudes. Conflict and opposition is a bit more tolerated and worked with in the moment up to a limit that depends on the circumstances and student in question. Behaviors threatening staff and student safety are dealt with more firmly and directly. Penikese is trained in the DEEC- and DOE-approved restraint method SCIT, or Supportive Crisis Intervention Techniques.

What does a day on Penikese look like? A detailed sample of an average day is available in the Parent-Student Handbook. Students work and attend school 6 days a week, Monday through Saturday. Each day after breakfast half the boys go to school and the other half go to work, and in the afternoon after lunch and break these groups switch so that those who were in morning school now do afternoon work, and so forth. After the work and school day ends – usually around 6 PM, the boys have supper, snack and then a period of supervised study before lights out around 10 PM. Sunday is the students’ only day off, but it is often spent working off fines and community service or participating in structured activities set up by the staff.

What do the students do for work? Penikese’s rustic setting was purposefully chosen to promote a work-intensive atmosphere and interdependent community. Everything the students (and staff alongside them) do supports the daily operations of the school, such as chopping wood to heat the house and cook their food. Students also receive vocational training and instruction, so they can often be found working on personal and community projects in the Wood Shop.

What do the students do for recreation? Penikese’s 75-acre island setting provides a beautiful natural setting for boys to be boys. Activities vary by season and the weather but include traditional outdoor team sports of football, basketball and volleyball to swimming, fishing, small boating and island hikes and beachcombing. Penikese has its share of indoor diversions, too: a pool table, foosball, ping-pong, and board games.

How does Penikese’s remote location promote student change? Although it can take some getting used to at first, much of Penikese’s success derives from its island location and remoteness. Penikese is ideally suited for those boys who need to be removed from the context of their troubles in order to begin to change. Separated from this context, students are then immersed in an authentic community of a therapeutic kind in which students can begin to develop and practice the connections, life skills, responsibility and accountability necessary to succeed as they work on successful transition back to their families, schools and community.

Does the school own the island? No. The island belongs to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and is a protected wildlife sanctuary under the management of MassWildlife. The school has a lease with the state outlining the terms and conditions of its occupancy; in exchange the school provides active stewardship and maintenance, and support for the state’s wildlife management projects.

How do you get to Penikese Island? The school owns its own Coast Guard-inspected vessel, the 36’ M/V Harold M. Hill, a dependable and rugged workboat that resembles a Maine lobster boat. The school keeps the Harold Hill in a slip in the center of Woods Hole’s village, a short walk from the onshore office.

How long does the trip take, and what do you do about bad weather? The trip between Woods Hole and Penikese takes about an hour and fifteen minutes, but this can vary given the direction of the wind and currents. The Harold Hill is extremely seaworthy and, as an inspected vessel, outfitted with all the requisite safety and emergency gear. Nevertheless the school cancels trips whenever the weather gets too rough and reschedules as soon as weather permits.

Do all school employees live and work on the island? No. The school is on Penikese Island and its administrative offices in Woods Hole, Massachusetts at 565 Woods Hole Road. Penikese employs about 15 full time island staff that work with each other and the boys in rotating shifts, 8 administrative staff (4 part time), and a boat captain to shuttle folks and supplies between Woods Hole and Penikese Island. Almost all administrative staff, even those in the business and development offices, have some role to play with the students; others, such as the Clinical and Aftercare directors, much more so.

What is the complement of the average shift of island staff, and how are the shifts arranged? Every shift has a shift leader, usually the person with the most experience and/or clinical training, a certified special education teacher, a person skilled in the vocational arts, and fourth person willing and able to do whatever else is needed. Administrative staff also take regular turns on the island, to bolster the crew or as relief staff when others are on leave.

How does Penikese decide when students are ready to graduate? To be eligible, students must complete a number of graduation requirements in different areas such as academics, life skills, and vocational arts. Other factors determining graduation timing include evaluating appropriate places to go after Penikese, and the general sense of readiness according to the student, his advocates, and Penikese.