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CELMX
1st November 2009, 16:36
There is this great magazine for teachers called “Teaching Tolerance.” It really shows how racist America is, instead of denying it. Tips are given to teachers, principals, administrators, etc. to fight all kinds of discrimination around the world.
http://www.tolerance.org/

Anyways, I was reading an article called “Pushed Out” from “Teaching Tolerance” magazine about zero tolerance policies in school, and how students are being pushed out of school and into the justice system. The author, Brownstein, made a great observation stating that children of color are paying the highest price, showing just how racist our society is.

It seems that now, not only are police harassing innocent, grown civilians, they are also entertaining themselves by arresting little children. And by little, I mean from 10 years old on. This is disgusting. And not only is it the polices’ fault; it’s also the principals, the teachers, administrators, etc. for allowing this to happen. Their policies are ever changing, and their getting worse and worse. Especially the new “zero tolerance” school disciplinary policies. These cause minor misdemeanors to become dramatic arrests, expulsions, suspensions, etc. Here is the article. It can also be viewed at http://www.tolerance.org/magazine/number-36-fall-2009/pushed-out


Eight year-old “Jenny” was suspended from her third-grade class for two days for bringing a pair of cuticle scissors to open the wrapper on her school breakfast. Under the school’s zero tolerance policy, Jenny’s teacher believed she had no choice but to report Jenny to the principal. Humiliated and traumatized, Jenny missed two days of school, and now has a suspension on her permanent school record.
“Joseph” was 13 when the bullying against him started. Under his school’s strict discipline rules, all students involved in a fight received the same punishment, regardless of who started it. After several fights that resulted in repeated, multi-day, out-of-school suspensions, Joseph fell further and further behind, failed the seventh grade, and became increasingly alienated from his school. He eventually dropped out.
These stories are all too typical of what is happening in schools across America. Significant numbers of students are being pushed out of school as a result of “zero tolerance” school discipline policies. While nobody questions the need to keep our schools safe, teachers, students, and parents are questioning the methods we are using in pursuit of that goal.
Initially enacted to counter violent behavior and drug use, zero tolerance school disciplinary policies have expanded to cover more minor misbehavior. As a result, the U.S. has experienced dramatic increases in the number of students suspended, expelled and referred to law enforcement for school-based incidents.
These practices are paving the way for higher dropout rates and involvement in the criminal justice system, a pathway often referred to as the “school-to-prison pipeline.” Likewise, these practices have been shown to worsen the climates of our schools, leading to teacher burnout.
Zero tolerance is a failed approach. Zero tolerance policies — policies that mandate predetermined consequences for rule infractions, regardless of the circumstances — were initially aimed at making schools safe. The best way to prevent serious violence at school, the theory went, was to ban any and all weapons or threats of violence, and to accept no excuses.
Over the past decade, however, many school districts have enacted harsh disciplinary consequences — suspensions, expulsions, alternative schools and referrals to law enforcement — for a broad array of student actions. These “one-size-fits-all” policies often apply not only to possession of weapons, drugs and alcohol, but also to possession of medications legitimately possessed by students, school supplies and common objects such as nail clippers and scissors. Zero tolerance policies have also been applied to behaviors like truancy, tardiness and vague catch-all categories such as “insubordination” and “disrespect.”
More kids are being suspended and expelled from school for relatively minor infractions.
From the St. Petersburg Times: a 10-year-old girl found a small knife in her lunchbox, placed there by her mother, for cutting an apple. She immediately gave the knife to her teacher, but was expelled from school for possessing a weapon.
file:///C:/Users/ARICAN%7E1/AppData/Local/Temp/msohtml1/01/clip_image001.gifFrom the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: A teen student in Columbus, Ga., was expelled for violating school rules by talking to his mother (with whom he had not spoken in 30 days) on a cell phone while at school. His mother was on deployment as a soldier in Iraq.
Across the nation, suspensions and expulsions in public schools have increased dramatically. Between 1974 and 2006, the rate at which U.S. students were suspended and expelled from school nearly doubled — from 3.7% of students in 1974 to 7.1% of students in 2006. The U.S. Department of Education estimates that over 100,000 students were expelled and 3,300,000 students were suspended at least once in the 2005-2006 school year, representing an 8% increase in suspensions and a 15% increase in expulsions since just the 2001-2002 school year (school enrollment increased by only 3% during the same period).
Kids who are suspended and expelled are at greater risk of dropping out. The consequences of these harsh disciplinary practices are devastating. Students who are repeatedly suspended, or who are expelled, are likely to fall behind their peers academically, paving the way to their eventual dropout. The research correlates dropout to suspensions and expulsions. A student is also more likely to drop out if he or she has been retained for a grade — a common consequence of multiple suspensions.
The “school-to-prison pipeline”
An 11-year-old at a middle school in Highlands Ranch, Colo., took a lollipop from a jar on the teacher’s desk and was charged with theft. The boy was convicted of a misdemeanor and put on probation.
In Florida, a five-year-old girl was arrested and forcibly removed from her elementary school by local police for having a temper tantrum in class.
Many schools and districts are turning to the juvenile justice system to handle school-related misconduct — and not just for violent behavior.
While law enforcement and the juvenile justice system play valuable roles in protecting school safety, too many school disciplinary incidents are being handled by the police and courts. Overreliance on police to handle school misbehavior keeps law enforcement from focusing on dangerous threats to school safety — the very reason zero tolerance policies were enacted in the first place.
Some teachers and administrators report a sense of hopelessness. They are required to call law enforcement for disciplinary matters for which they used to call home; instead of helping to resolve conflict, they must watch school resource officers handle discipline by arresting students. Others view juvenile court involvement as a way to obtain much-needed social services for students in crisis. But for students, the consequences of being arrested are devastating.
According to a 2006 study by Gary Sweeten of Arizona State University, a first-time arrest during high school nearly doubles the odds of a student dropping out, and a court appearance nearly quadruples those odds. Arrested youth are also likely to see school as the institution that resulted in their involvement with the criminal justice system, harming any trusting relationship with educators. Alienation from school has been shown to accelerate the course toward juvenile offending. According to the Centers for Disease Control, out-of-school youth are significantly more likely than in-school youth to engage in physical fights, carry a weapon, smoke, use alcohol and other drugs, and engage in sex.
Exclusionary disciplinary policies do not make schools safer or more academically sound. Exclusionary discipline policies are based on the assumption that the removal of disruptive students will result in a safer climate for others. That sounds like common sense, but the research shows the opposite. Schools with higher rates of school suspension and expulsion appear to have less satisfactory ratings of school climate and less satisfactory school governance structures, according to the American Psychological Association. They also appear to spend a disproportionate amount of time on disciplinary matters. Recent research also indicates a negative relationship between the use of school suspension and expulsion and school-wide academic achievement, even when controlling for demographics such as socioeconomic status.
Not an Effective Deterrentfile:///C:/Users/ARICAN%7E1/AppData/Local/Temp/msohtml1/01/clip_image002.jpg
Rather than reducing the likelihood of disruption, school suspension appears to predict higher future rates of misbehavior and suspension. Studies of school suspension have typically found that 30 to 50 percent of those suspended will be suspended again. In one study, researchers Tary Tobin, George Sugai and Geoff Colvin found that students who were suspended at the sixth-grade level were more likely to be referred to the office or suspended in eighth grade, leading the researchers to conclude that “for some students, suspension functions as a reinforcer rather than a punisher.”
Teachers are being pushed out, too. American schools have a high teacher turnover rate, and while it’s difficult to attribute the problem to one single source, ineffective discipline polices clearly play a role in driving teachers out of the profession.
In a 2005 national survey of teachers leaving the profession, 44 percent of teachers and 39 percent of highly qualified teachers cited student behavior as a reason for leaving. According to a 2004 national survey of middle and high school teachers, 76 percent of teachers indicated that they would be better able to educate students if discipline problems were not so prevalent.
Exclusionary disciplinary policies have a racially disparate impact. Nationwide, African American students are suspended at nearly three times the rate and expelled at 3.5 times the rate of white students, according to the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights. Latino students are almost 1.5 times as likely to be suspended, and almost twice as likely to be expelled, as their white peers.
White students are referred to the office at a higher rate than students of color for offenses that are more objectively proven: smoking, vandalism, leaving without permission, and obscene language. In contrast, African-American and Latino students are referred for discipline at a higher rate than their white peers for disrespect, excessive noise and loitering — behaviors that would seem to rely more on subjective judgments on the part of educators.
Exclusionary disciplinary policies disproportionately affect students with special education needs.
Ten-year-old James was dealing with severe emotional and behavioral disturbances. Over a two-month period, other students harassed him multiple times. James reported the harassment to school officials, to no avail. A week after being choked by a student, James was knocked to the ground by the same student while others watched and laughed. Frustrated, angry and frightened, James jumped to his feet shouting, “I could kill you.” When school officials called the police, James was removed from the school in handcuffs, placed alone in the back of a police van, and charged with making “terroristic threats.”file:///C:/Users/ARICAN%7E1/AppData/Local/Temp/msohtml1/01/clip_image003.jpg
Children with mental and emotional disabilities are much more likely to be suspended, expelled and arrested at school, despite disciplinary protections that exist under federal special education law. Many of these children have a difficult time conforming their behavior to school requirements. Lacking the necessary — and legally required — supports and services to address the behaviors that are a manifestation of some disabilities, many schools are desperately turning to school exclusion as their response.
Alternatives To Zero Tolerance
More than 9,000 schools across the country are trying to curb the pushout problem by implementing Positive Behavior Supports (http://www.pbis.org/) (PBS), an evidence-based, data-driven approach proven to reduce disciplinary incidents, increase a school’s sense of safety, improve attendance rates and support improved academic outcomes. Implementing PBS improves school climate and helps keep students and teachers in safe and productive classrooms.
PBS (sometimes referred to as Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports or PBIS), is based on the premise that continual teaching, modeling, recognizing and rewarding of positive student behavior will reduce unnecessary discipline and promote a climate of greater productivity, safety and learning. PBS schools apply a multi-tiered approach to prevention, using disciplinary data and principles of behavior analysis to develop school-wide, targeted and individualized interventions and supports to improve school climate.
PBS is just part of the solution to the pushout problem. School administrators need alternatives to exclusionary school discipline practices. Even in the age of zero tolerance, many school districts have disciplinary codes that allow for a great deal of discretion by teachers and school-level administrators. In some cases, school personnel have options beyond suspension, expulsion or arrest, but are simply unfamiliar with effective alternatives to these measures.
There are indeed effective alternative strategies, including:
• “behavior contracts” that spell out expected behaviors, consequences for infractions, and incentives for demonstrating positive behaviors
• community service
• after-school detention
• loss of a privilege, such as attendance at a school sporting event.
• in-school suspension, during which the student can complete assignments and receive academic assistance.
• a “Check & Connect” program, in which a student meets one-on-one with a designated teacher several times a week to “check-in” and receive support.
Fixing school discipline is not an impossible task. The first step, for teachers and administrators, is to recognize their own power.
Working together, teachers, administrators and parents can create safe and orderly classrooms where class time is spent on instruction, not wasted on ineffective discipline.

JazzRemington
3rd November 2009, 16:19
Are you familiar with the concept of tracking? This is a system that involves placing children in different "tracks", each having different curriculum. For instance, a high track might include advanced classes whereas a low track might include remedial or intro classes. The problem is that for the most part, students in the lower tracks are generally minorities while in the upper tracks they're mostly white.

The lower track students are thought to be the problem students and are thus usually more subject to disciplinary actions while those in the upper tracks are allowed free expression and such. There was a paper I read once that detailed the differences between what amounts to upper and lower track foreign language classes: the lower track classes were more focused on memorization and forming rudimentary sentences from pre-approved words whereas the upper track classes were more open, free-form, and was focused on communicating with and understanding the language.

The idea about tracking is that it's supposed to act as a "funnel" that pushes students into the "correct" class curriculum (the bright students will go to the best classes, etc.) but students are usually assigned to tracks for reasons other than academic performance. For example, a student who is generally bright but has behavioral problems will get stuck in the lower track classes. This is problematic because for one, the higher track students do perform better academically but the people in the lower track classes will get substantially worse over time. In other words, upper track classes have a positive influence on academic performance while lower track classes have a negative influence.

All of this is especially troublesome when one understands that there is evidence to suggest that students in the advanced classes tend to cheat more often than those in other classes. So in a way, tracking is more of a detriment than a help.

CELMX
3rd November 2009, 17:36
No! I actually have not heard of it, though it seems a capitalist government would have this type of 'filtering.' It seems absolutely terrible, and useless.

And anyways, even if the students in advanced classes worked, it would make the gap between intelligent and not as 'intelligent' students larger. The slower students could actually be intelligent, but they are just slower. It doesn't make sense to give them less of an education than people who learn faster. If anything, I think that the not as intelligent, slower, etc. students should get better help, education, etc. so that they can reach their full potential (well, they can't really in a capitalist society, but at least this would be better than not getting enough knowledge)
It's a mirror image of capitalism. The poor get poorer while the rich get richer. :(:mad:


I think you gave a general idea of what this 'tracking' is, but I was wondering if you could give more information, maybe a link or something, about this?

Oh, and is this practiced world wide, or just in the states? (where i go to school)

Glenn Beck
3rd November 2009, 19:03
It's a mirror image of capitalism. The poor get poorer while the rich get richer. :(:mad:

This is exactly right. The school system is set up to give different classes and different strata a different education, a different outlook, a different set of tools for handling the world.

Check out this article, although it focuses more on class than race, given the correlation between class and race it seems directly relevant to the bleak state of the public education system:

http://socialistworker.org/2009/08/05/getting-your-class-organized

JazzRemington
3rd November 2009, 20:21
I think you gave a general idea of what this 'tracking' is, but I was wondering if you could give more information, maybe a link or something, about this?

Oh, and is this practiced world wide, or just in the states? (where i go to school)

I think it's only practiced in the US. I'm not sure about Canada or anywhere else.

The wiki article on tracking (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tracking_%28education%29) is a good intro, and it contains citations at the end of the article if you want to know more. There's a text book I had on equality in education but I can't recall the name off hand, so I'll have to dig around my records to find it.

Edit: This is the textbook (http://www.amazon.com/Equality-Achievement-Introduction-Sociology-Education/dp/0130481777/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1257279851&sr=1-3), but it's kind of dense and delves deeply into different studies.

CELMX
4th November 2009, 00:20
Correct me if I'm wrong, but is placing children in honors, AP, normal, and 'lower ability' (sorry, i forgot what the name of it was:blushing:) tracking??

Oh, and I have a question, there's this curriculum called "MESA" http://www.washingtonmesa.org/
and it's basically math and science for minorities. I personally think that it's great, because it has better education, projects, etc. than normal classes. But I can see the other side of it. It also separates minorities from other kids.
GAHHH!! sorry, am i going off topic?

Glenn BEck, thanks for this! ===> http://socialistworker.org/2009/08/05/getting-your-class-organized
Just a comment, my school has a lot of rote learning involved, and it's also middle class. I feel this is extremely unfair (the rote learning chunk), for it is very simple for students to regurgitate what they have learned. The people that actually reflect, disagree and take their time are in lower classes than people who just spit out information like a robot, never to remember it again.
I am in honors classes, and as one of those regurgitating robots, I am doing great. A large complaint I have is though I can memorize easily, I can't seem to think. That is, I can't seem to reflect, have my own opinion, summarize in my own words, about certain matters.
This, I believe, is a great error in our capitalist education. It's not happening just in working-class schools, but in middle-class (actually, maybe higher, for it is one of the best public schools in the state) schools. It happens in "affluent professional" and "executive elite" schools too. I feel one of the most important efforts to make is to toss away most rote learning and apply emphasis on creativity.
Though, this is a capitalist country, and I don't think capitalists would like to reform our education. They want us to grow up as nice little automatons that listen to everything the state tells us to do. The only way, I believe, to make our education nondiscriminatory, nonclassist, creative and make us actually INTELLIGENT is to overthrow the whole society.

Sorry 'bout all that rambling:blushing:

JazzRemington
4th November 2009, 00:58
Correct me if I'm wrong, but is placing children in honors, AP, normal, and 'lower ability' (sorry, i forgot what the name of it was:blushing:) tracking??

High and Low Track are broad terms signifying different types of classes. AP, honors classes, and other advanced classes are considered high track classes whereas normal or remedial classes are considered low track classes.


Oh, and I have a question, there's this curriculum called "MESA" http://www.washingtonmesa.org/
and it's basically math and science for minorities. I personally think that it's great, because it has better education, projects, etc. than normal classes. But I can see the other side of it. It also separates minorities from other kids.
GAHHH!! sorry, am i going off topic?

I'm not sure what you're saying here. I'm also not familiar with MESA.