2011-12-11 "Across San Francisco Region, Expulsion
Rates and Attitudes Toward Punishment Vary Widely" by T.J. Johnston from
"SF Public Press" newspaper
[http://sfpublicpress.org/news/2011-12/across-san-francisco-region-expulsion-rates-and-attitudes-toward-punishment-vary-widely]
While
there are many aspects of culture and politics that unite the nine
counties of the San Francisco Bay Area, a region of more than 7 million
people, attitudes toward school discipline do not seem to be among them.
What happens to students when they disrupt the classroom or commit crimes depends largely on where they live.
That
is because approaches to expulsion and suspension vary widely across
school districts and across the region. Over the past seven years in the
Bay Area, expulsion rates range from among the very lowest in
California in San Francisco County, averaging 0.07 percent, to nearly
double the state average in Napa and Solano counties to the north,
averaging 1.08 percent and 1 percent. San Francisco isn’t the only
county that has seen recent declines. Napa county has seen a sharp
per-capita decline.
While reforms such as restorative justice
appear to coincide with decreases in expulsion rates across the region
in the last year or two, school administrators at the county and local
level have a wide range of views on the best ways to preserve order in
schools after a student has misbehaved. While some have embraced peer
courts and after-school diversion programs, others have given little
credence to the trend toward softer disciplinary practices taking off in
places like San Francisco.
By their nature, California school
districts are independent, and policies on everything from security to
dress codes can differ significantly. There is no uniform approach to
discipline, as borne out by statistics compiled by the California
Department of Education.
The disparities among schoolchildren in
low-income and minority communities have been extensively documented.
Two recent studies reported that minority students were more likely to
be expelled or suspended than their white peers for similar offenses. In
Texas, the Council of State Governments reported that African-American
students were 31 percent more likely than whites or Hispanics to be
suspended or expelled under the discretionary decision-making authority
of local school officials.
In North Carolina, 32 percent of black
students received out-of-school suspensions for the first instance of
possessing a cell phone. Fewer than 15 percent of white students were
suspended for the same offense.
Most recently, a University of
California-Los Angeles study suggested that harsh penalties for
misbehavior impair student achievement and offer no benefit to other
students.
While schools in California have discretion in
suspending students, the decision to expel them ultimately belongs to
school boards. (Cases of violence or drug use, though, fall under state
laws that require zero-tolerance and removal from schools.) In 1995, the
state enacted Assembly Bill 922, authorizing districts to set up
community day schools, in hopes of keeping banished students out of the
“school-to-prison pipeline.”
The website kidsdata.org, a project
of the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s Health, compiled
statistics based on figures reported by counties to state education
officials. The data over the last seven years show San Francisco
consistently expelling the fewest students yearly, between 13 and 77
students.
In contrast, Alameda and Contra Costa counties each
ejected around 400 students per year since the 2004-05 academic year,
most coming from Alameda’s Oakland Unified and Contra Costa’s West
Contra Costa Unified school districts.
The leaders in the rate of
expulsions over this period were Solano and Napa counties, though
recently the numbers of expulsions have fallen. Each with more than 1
percent of students kicked out, these two counties flanking San
Francisco Bay to the north far exceeded California’s overall rate, which
hovered between 0.30 and 0.50 percent between 2005 and 2011. It wasn’t
until last year that Napa’s expulsion rate fell to 0.15 percent, below
the current state average of 0.35 percent.
Changing attitudes
Some
school boards stand out as leaders in reducing expulsion rates even as
the counties where they reside struggle to find effective means to do
so.
Napa County has seen the sharpest decline in the Bay Area.
Reintegrating oft-disciplined students into the mainstream of the
student population is the goal in Napa County schools, said Kurt
Schultz, a retired Napa High School dean who is now the district’s due
process administrator.
“We’ve critically taken a look at the
number of expulsions and implemented a strategic intervention,” Schultz
said. “We take an overall look at interventions that re-engage students
in the classroom.”
Schultz attributed the county’s previous high
expulsion numbers to gang activity in the schools, mostly among Hispanic
students. Better cultural understanding and interventions against gang
activity led to a significant drop in expulsions. In addition, the
district collaborated with law enforcement, social service agencies and
community groups to address disciplinary issues.
“All of us working together has made such a nice impact on safety in school campuses,” Schultz said.
Napa
is experimenting with other methods to keep kids in school when they
act out. Alternatives to expulsion include in-school suspension and
having students write apology letters to the people they have wronged.
“My
philosophy about discipline is when we talk to families, I have a firm
belief those are real opportunities to teach students what it is to be
successful young women and men,” Schultz said.
Although school
districts are required to report the numbers and causes for expulsion to
the state education department, information about a student’s race,
ethnicity or socioeconomic status is given on a voluntary basis. A few
district administrators did acknowledge that expulsions against
minorities were disproportionate — part of the national pattern.
The
West Contra Costa Unified School District, with an expulsion rate of
0.49 percent last year, is working to address the underlying causes of
student misbehavior. Since 2006, the district has expelled more than 100
students each year, mostly for drug-related offenses by boys from
ethnic minority groups. Last year's rate also reflects a small but
growing trend in female expulsions for bullying. Wendell Greer, the
associate superintendent of the district’s schools, points to the bleak
economy as a source of tension.
“We’re seeing the stresses of
poverty, unemployment, homelessness and hunger,” Greer said. “Basic
needs are not being met. You see more of this underlying current of
being disenfranchised.”
But in the first two months of this school
year, only three students were expelled, a significant drop from the 10
to 12 expulsions the district averaged per month last year. Greer
credits such methods as restorative justice and peer mediation. Using
such techniques, students get involved in the process to defuse
conflicts and resolve them peacefully.
“We give them the tools to discuss the consequences of their actions,” he said.
Assessing
students’ needs doesn’t necessarily stop after they are expelled.
Community day schools, as required by state law, fill that role, he
said: “Counseling is 90 percent of what they do in the community
schools.”
Sunday, December 11, 2011
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