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Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Do Suspensions Work? A Tool to Improve Student Behaviors and/or a Pipeline to Prison? | Ed In The Apple

Do Suspensions Work? A Tool to Improve Student Behaviors and/or a Pipeline to Prison? | Ed In The Apple

Do Suspensions Work? A Tool to Improve Student Behaviors and/or a Pipeline to Prison?


Once a month a thousand or so teacher unionists file into Shanker Hall at the United Federation of Teachers for the monthly Delegate Assembly, the elected delegates are incredibly diverse, by gender, race and ethnicity. After the president’s report the meeting moves to a question period, one delegate asked, “My principal asked me to raise an issue, a student came to school with a knife, the Department of Education would only allow a short in-school suspension because the knife was only 4” long, shouldn’t we be able to impose a longer out of school suspension? The kid has to learn a lesson?” The union president agreed, the Discipline Code , the size of a phone book, might be overly restrictive, and then asked, “Shouldn’t the question be why he brought the knife to school?”
On one side: “School is a pipeline to prison, suspensions are racist and must be eliminated,” on the other, “There must be consequences for inappropriate behavior and suspensions must be one of the options.”
The suspension question is complicated, and, the “sides” are deeply entrenched.
There are 14,000 school districts, fifty states and thousands of charter schools, all of whom have a discipline code, plus, the Department of Education (USDE).
Some school districts employ “exclusionary suspensions,” meaning out-of-school suspensions while others, including New York City, only have in-school suspensions.
Some districts employ “zero tolerance” policies, suspensions for low level behavioral infringements while others, including New York City, require a ladder CONTINUE READING: Do Suspensions Work? A Tool to Improve Student Behaviors and/or a Pipeline to Prison? | Ed In The Apple