Study: Black Students Suspended More For Small Infractions
School suspensions for non-white students in grades K-12 have increased by more than 100 percent since 1970. That's according to a recent report highlighted by TheRoot.com. The report, "Discipline Policies, Successful Schools, and Racial Justice," was conducted by the National Education Policy Center. The report uses data from the U.S. Department of Education's Civil Rights Office, along with figures collected under No Child Left Behind and a sampling of state education agencies to illustrate the widening disciplinary gap between students of color and their white counterparts. The Root's Joshua Weaver provides more details:
The report provides alternatives to suspensions and highlights states who actually put those alternatives into practice. Maryland, for example, passed a law in 2004 ordering that if suspensions reach 10 percent of an elementary school's enrollment, the elementary school must engage in a Positive Behavioral Interventions and Support program. The reports cites Connecticut legislation as the strongest example of state law that pushes back on zero- tolerance approaches. Connecticut law requires that schools employ in-school suspension for nearly every school code infraction when the violator does not continue to pose a threat to himself or others. The complete report is available below and at the National Education Policy Center's website. NEPC School Discipline Losen 1 PB FINAL |
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