School Bus Conduct Tracking Made Easy - Since 1999

BusConduct is a web-based software application that:
  • Tracks student conduct problems for school transportation departments.
  • Communicates conduct incident referrals, via email, to the school or discipline administrator.
  • Tracks disciplinary action taken.
  • Provides timely feedback for school bus drivers.
  • Creates bilingual PDF or HTML conduct incident reports for parents.
  • Provides statistical reports for school transportation administrators, transportation providers, school bus drivers, and disciplinary staff.
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I was looking for SchoolTIRES!

SchoolTIRES has changed it's name to BusConduct. It's still the same easy-to-use program and the same support staff. We thought the new name would be less confusing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why Track Referrals Electronically?
  • Communication between departments is instantaneous.
  • By running reports, you can identify problem students, routes, drivers, or administrators more quickly.
  • You can avoid the expense, unprofessional appearance, and inflexibility of multi-part carbon forms.
Why Use a Web-Based System?
  • You can work from anywhere as long as you have an internet connection, a browser, and are set up with a username and password.
  • You can avoid the hassle and expense of software installations and upgrades.
  • You can avoid having to rely on district technical support.
Why Choose Incwebs Inc. and BusConduct?
  • BusConduct is easy to use and hassle free. There is nothing to install because we host the program on our servers. We can set you up on the program in minutes. Although, it may take up to a couple of hours for you to customize the program for use in your district.
  • We provide unlimited phone training for one school district representative. Training time is usually very minimal because of help items on the pages and the intuitive design.
  • We provide excellent technical support. You will get to speak directly to a programmer with issues and not to some help desk that doesn't understand the program.
  • BusConduct has been supporting school transportation department conduct tracking and reporting since 1999. We have a consistant track record of excellent service.
  • BusConduct is secure and uses 256 bit encryption.
What does it cost?

Pricing is based on the number of students that your district transports on a daily basis. After signing up to try the program for yourself, you will have access to create a quote for your school district. Or you can contact us directly.

BusConduct has one low yearly fee includes everything:
  • program hosting and access for an unlimited number of users
  • support
  • training
  • upgrades
What are the System Requirements?
  • You will need a computer, with a broadband internet connection.
  • Most recent browsers will work (no older than 7 years old). Internet Explorer will work the best. Some other browsers may not display everything as intended.

BusConduct in the News

Web-based Software Helps Driver Retention, Says School Administrators
This article appeared in the December 2000 issue of School Transportation News and is reproduced here with STN's permission.

BUFFALO, N.Y.-Unruly students are often cited among the reasons school bus drivers leave the profession. To date, video cameras have been among the key strategies to bring student behavior into line. Now, a software program that relies on Internet technologies has been introduced signaling that bad behavior on the school bus may finally be a thing of the past.

A web-based disciplinary reporting program called TIRES (nka BusConduct), which stands for Transportation Incident Reporting System, has been credited with reducing driver turnover, according to administrators of Anoka-Hennepin School District in Minnesota.

The student behavior management software system designed by IncWebs (fka Incompass) Inc. was introduced at NAPT in Buffalo, N.Y., during a workshop. BusConduct eliminates the use of multi-page incident report forms, doesn't take up hard drive space and may be run on any computer with a web browser and access to the Internet, says the software developer.

How It Works
The bus driver reports the incident and it is immediately entered online, explained Jules Bohanon, IncWebs' applications development director. The appropriate school disciplinary officials are notified by email within minutes. The [principal] logs on and gets a list of all incidents that happened that day. Adding a student ID number eliminates the possibility of confusing one student with another. The program allows access to students' entire incident record for the school year. With this information, the school is able to make timely recommendations and penalties.

Parents of the child and the bus company (and driver) receive reports with the school's recommendations and penalties imposed.

Real Time Experience
"Two years ago, the district elected to adopt IncWebs' web-based program," said Chuck Holden, director of operations, Anoka-Hennepin School District. "The district was printing 20,000 five-page reports a year. The printing cost alone pays for the software," he said.

"Driver retention was our biggest concern. We were unable to respond to a huge problem. With BusConduct, drivers no longer wait up to a week to learn the results of an incident report," said Holden. "We have 130 users on the system-50 different schools, public and non-public. Our 20,000 reports have been cut in half. Drivers appreciate the quick response and retention has improved."

How well does the program work?
Coon Rapids Middle School was an unpopular school to drive for when Mary Fonken-Holden became assistant principal. "We had the worst discipline record in the district. The system makes it easy to locate which bus is having problems, so I can in turn help the drivers. Now, ours is the school drivers want to drive for because they know they are responded to," said Fonken-Holden.


A new web-based software program by a Florida company for reporting student misbehavior on school buses can help reduce disciplinary problems and increase driver retention, according to its developers.
This article appeared in the February 14, 2001 issue of the School Transportation Director newsletter, and is reprinted with their permission.

The software program, TIRES (nka BusConduct), an acronym for Transportation Incident Referral System, is a relatively new program, reports Jules Bohanon, applications development director for IncWebs (fka Incompass) Inc. in Lakeland, Florida (previously St. Paul, MN).

Request for Assistance
The program grew out of a request for assistance by a Minnesota school district, she explains.  “Basically, a few years ago, a district in Minnesota contacted us.  We’ve been working with school districts [for] about 15 years, helping them collect and report data more efficiently.  They were having a problem with behavior reporting, especially turn-around time,” Bohanon says.

“It was taking them too long to get the information on discipline matters to the right people,” she adds.  The districts procedures—similar to what a lot of districts do now—was to use a five-part carbon form, which was filled in by the bus driver.  “Say Johnny was throwing spitballs on the bus.  The driver fills out the form, and turns it in to the safety coordinator at the bus company, who turns it in to the school.  It could be two or three days before Johnny is called in or his parents are notified,” Bohanon explains.  By then, particularly with younger children, the student may have forgotten his behavior, or found some way to justify it to himself.  “So a week later, Johnny goes home with a report and he tells his parents he didn’t do it, and of course they believe him, and they call up the transportation director and complain—and nothing really happens,” she says.

The Anoka-Hennepin school district, for which the program initially was developed, is a large district, and was recording about 20,000 behavioral incidents a year, Bohanon reports.  “There were stacks of paper everywhere.  There were parents always calling.  It was a disaster.”

Internet-Based System
IncWebs decided, after evaluating the situation, that an Internet-based system for reporting the information would be the best way to go, and launched a pilot program in the 1999-2000 school year.  The school district recorded a 50 percent reduction in behavior complaints during the pilot period, and began using the system district-wide in the 2000-2001 school year—with 50 schools and 130 users on the system, Bohanon says.

Only 2000 Incidents
Thus far, she reports, during the period for which the district normally would have expected to have 10,000 incidents, there have been only 2,000.  “They attribute that reduction to the BusConduct program, because of a couple of things,” she says.  "One is the quick turn-around.” 

The system allows the bus driver to park his or her bus at the bus garage, fill out a report, and give [it] to a clerk, who enters the report into the BusConduct program.  “Then, as soon as that happens [the incident report is automatically e-mailed] to the principal at that kid’s school,” she explains. Within the first hour of the school day, the principal can check and see what reports have been filed.

“[The principal] can see that ‘so-and-so’ did something bad on the bus.  The principal can talk to the child, and enter the child’s defense on the report…and then the system prints out a really nice-looking report that goes out to the parents,” Bohanon says.

Report Looks Official
That report, she notes, “looks official,” instead of the “hand-scrawled thing” that parents would have received under the former system.  “It really is official-looking, and they get it the same day—and have to sign it and return it to the school,” she adds.

The official appearance of the document seems to have a much greater effect on the students and parents, Bohanon notes.  “When the principal decides what punishment is to be handed out, it’s entered into the BusConduct system, and the bus company can look on the system and see what the result was of them writing that kid up,” she says.

“They’ve never had that before.  Unless the kid disappeared off the bus for a couple of days, [drivers] wouldn’t know if writing this person up had any results at all,” she explains.

Call Parent Immediately
The system also allows the school to call a parent immediately to let them know they have to pick up a child who has been suspended from riding the bus—and the bus operator can log on at noon and know how the school has responded.

“The result of that—an unexpected result—has been improved driver retention,” Bohanon says.  “According to the bus companies in our regional pilot district, the number one reason for drivers leaving is not the bad pay, not the hours, but the kids that act up and make the drivers’ lives difficult,” she says.  Now, she says, the bus companies serving the district are holding on to their drivers longer.

IncWebs is hoping to expand the use of BusConduct (which currently is being used or tested by a dozen or so districts)—and is offering a 90-day free trial to districts.  In addition to lining up more customers, IncWebs is interested in getting comments and learning what modifications may be needed to improve the system, Bohanon says.

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