MATT CREGOR, STAFF ATTORNEY LAWYERS’ COMMITTEE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE Long Island Regional Leadership Summit on School-Justice Partnerships.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Logistics PDF of the presentation is available at This is also where the webinar.
Advertisements

A system of laws, policies, and practices that pushes students out of schools and into the juvenile and criminal systems An over-reliance on school.
MATT CREGOR, STAFF ATTORNEY LAWYERS’ COMMITTEE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE 2014 National PBIS Leadership Forum October 30, 2014 On Being Treated.
As many as 70% of the youth involved At least 20% of youth in the juvenile 32% of children with learning disabilities Only 35% of students identified.
Dr. Laura Taylor: Assistant Superintendent Mr. Orlando Thomas: Director CHAMPAIGN UNIT 4 SCHOOL DISTRICT DISCIPLINE FROM A SOCIAL JUSTICE LENS.
It’s Our Problem: Examining the Impact of the School-to-Prison Pipeline through a Local Lens Elissa Johnson, Esq. Discipline in Schools: Moving Beyond.
A Spotlight on Multi-tiered Interventions and Supports through an Advocacy and Policy Lens in Juvenile Facilities  Simon G. Gonsoulin, Principal Researcher,
Framing the Challenge: Research on Disciplinary Disproportionality and the Need for Equity- Explicit Intervention Russ Skiba The Equity Project at Indiana.
Andreal Davis, Kent Smith Wisconsin RtI Center/PBIS Network Exemplar presenters: Jessica Grandt-Turk, Lindsey Krueger Harrison Elementary School, Janesville,
DISCIPLINARY PRACTICES UPDATE Student Support Initiatives
Unpacking the Departments of Education and Justice School Discipline Guidance Package School Justice Leadership Summit April 3, 2014 Kaitlin Banner.
Can Data Drive Policy and Change in Oakland Schools? NNIP Providence 2012 Urban Strategies Council Taking.
1 School Discipline in Arkansas Kaitlin Anderson, Jennifer Ash, Dr. Gary Ritter UA Office for Education Policy December 11, 2014 Arkansas School Boards.
DISPROPORTIONALITY DATA GUIDE Using Discipline Data within SWPBIS to Identify and Address Disproportionality Session B9 Kelsey R. Morris, EdD—University.
Reducing Disproportionality in Suspensions and Positive Behavior Supports Suzann Wilson Lori Rogerson.
Racial Profiling and the St.Cloud Police Department.
Implicit Bias and Cultural Competence Around Race, Disability, Gender and Gender Identity, and Sexual Orientation National Leadership Conference on School.
Anti-Bullying Policy Federal -State-School Board-Legal System Coalition for Safe Schools.
Council of State Governments Justice Center | 1 The School Discipline Consensus Project: Improving Students’ Academic Outcomes and Reducing Juvenile Justice.
A MODEL CODE ON EDUCATION AND DIGNITY Webinar: Model Code Comparison Tool.
1 Worcester Public Schools A Collaborative-Proactive Approach to provide a Safe Teaching and Learning Environment.
Chapter 222 of the Acts of 2012, An Act Relative to Students Access to Educational Services and Exclusion from School.
Preventing Youth Delinquency Identifying School Risk & Protective Factors Preventing Youth Delinquency Identifying School Risk & Protective Factors Christine.
HOW TO: Explore the OCR Website Part 1: A Look at District Data Summaries 1.
School Discipline and Students in Foster Care: A Texas Case Study National Association of Counsel for Children Conference October 23, 2010 Jane Burstain,
The Bullying Connection Federal – State - School District - Legal System Coalition for Safe Schools.
Positive Discipline Student engagement with restorative practice models.
Presented to School Districts in Arkansas. Is educational equity really an issue? Nationally – Black children represent 18% of preschool enrollment,
Disproportionality, School Discipline and Academic Achievement Chris Borgmeier Portland State University.
WE CAN’T TEACH WHO WE DON’T KNOW DR. LISA WILLIAMS OFFICE OF EQUITY AND CULTURAL PROFICIENCY Culturally Responsive Instructional and Disciplinary Practices.
The ESEA, Graduation Rates and Early Warnings Daniel J. Losen Director, Center for Civil Rights Remedies The Civil Rights Project at UCLA ©2011.
Strategies for Building a Better In School Suspension
Georgene Fountain Montgomery County Public Schools: ES MUSIC EDUCATOR Baltimore City Community College- English Tuskegee University- Sociology Tuskegee.
K-12 Student Discipline Jess Lewis Program Supervisor, Behavior, RTL, and K-12 Discipline
Office for Civil Rights (OCR) School Discipline Data Webinar Summary June 18,
MISSOURI SCHOOL BOARDS’ ASSOCIATION Don’t Keep Us in Suspense: An Examination of the Student Discipline Crisis October 3, 2015 Lawrence J. Wadsack and.
School Discipline Communication Plan Kierstyn Johnson ADMS 626 Summer 2015.
Breaking Schools’ Rules: A Statewide Study of How Student Discipline Relates to Students’ Success and Juvenile Justice Involvement Michael Thompson Director.
Blacklisted: Racial Bias in Schools Today and What YOU Can Do About It Presented by Dr. Diane Kern, School of Education, and a virtual appearance by the.
Courtney Russell EDIT 6900 Spring  Introduction Background for the Study Purpose of the Study Research Questions Significance of the Study  Review.
After viewing if you have questions, concerns, or you do not understand any portion of the information provided please see a building administrator for.
“Schoolhouse to the Jailhouse” 1 “Public School Prison Pipeline” The Interaction between Public Schools and the Juvenile Justice System.
“Males of Color” Initiative A Presentation to the Providence School Board May 11, 2015.
The Association’s Role in Closing the Achievement Gap CTA Presidents’ Conference 2015 San Jose, CA Chad Cooper/RUS, Imperial Kenya Spearman/RUS, Sacramento.
Interventions to Increase Pro-social Behaviors (Effective Discipline, Consequences, and Rewards)
Disproportionate Minority Contact in Connecticut’s Juvenile Justice System  A presentation to the  Commission on Racial & Ethnic Disparity in the Criminal.
Children’s Policy Conference Keeping Kids Closer to Home Peter Selby, PhD -- February 24, 2016.
Teaching with Purpose Leadership Institute HB 2192: Leading for Equity Oregon’s School Discipline Law and Implications for Policy and Practice John Inglish,
“Big Man on Campus”: The Campus Behavior Coordinator’s Role for School Discipline Cynthia S. Buechler Buechler & Associates, P.C Stoneridge Road,
Equity in IDEA ___________________ NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING Michael Yudin Assistant Secretary for Special Education and Rehabilitative Services Ruth.
Youth First Initiative National Survey Results and Analysis.
UPDATE ON DISPROPORTIONATE DISCIPLINE DATA August 25, 2015.
RETHINK DISCIPLINE #RETHINKDISCIPLINE WHITE HOUSE CONVENING 2015 KIM STEVENSON, DISTRICT DISCIPLINE ADMINISTRATOR HEATHER LANCASTER, COMMUNICATION DIRECTOR.
History & Overview of Suspensions
MISSOURI ASSOCIATION OF SECONDARY SCHOOL PRINCIPALS Guidance on the Administration of Student Discipline October 6, 2015 Lawrence J. Wadsack and Emily.
Unit 6: The American Legal System
R.A.C.C.E. Radical Advocates for Cross Cultural Education
2010 PBIS National Leadership Forum
Breaking the School to Prison Pipeline
School Justice Partnership Project
School Discipline Gap: Multicultural Training Workshop
Moving Mountains: Changing the way we discipline in Washington State
Improving School Discipline to Promote Success for Students with Disabilities Presented by Kevin Caudill Easterseals Central Texas.
Racial Disparities in Discipline Practices
The Need to Support Challenging Students as part of Massachusetts’ Discipline Reform by Daniel J. Losen Director, The Center for Civil Rights Remedies,
#RETHINKDISCIPLINE 401 South Queen Street
Agenda Welcome and Overview
Matthew Friedman, Ames C. Grawert, and James Cullen. 2017
handling juvenile records
VIRGINIA BOARD OF EDUCATION Model Guidance for Positive and Preventive Code of Student Conduct Policy and Alternatives to Suspension
Presentation transcript:

MATT CREGOR, STAFF ATTORNEY LAWYERS’ COMMITTEE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE Long Island Regional Leadership Summit on School-Justice Partnerships March 7, 2014 The Unintended Consequences of School-Justice Practices

School discipline has changed Suspension and expulsion rates are at their all-time highs – practically double the rates of the 1970s.  3.3 million students are suspended at least once each year  Over 100,000 are expelled each year  A Texas study found that less than 3% of disciplinary actions were for incidents that required removal under state law. More schools are relying on police, not just to protect school safety, but to address disciplinary issues  In Pennsylvania, the number of school-based arrests almost tripled between and from 4,563 to 12,918.  In Florida, 69% of the state ’ s 21,289 arrests and referrals in were for misdemeanors More districts are sending students to “alternative schools” for student behavior.

All students are affected 6-year-old Salecia Johnson was handcuffed and taken from school to the police station after throwing a temper tantrum at her school in Milledgeville, GA (2012). 11-year-old Alexa Gonzalez was arrested for writing “I love my friends” on her desk in eraseable marker at her Queens, NY, middle school (2010). 15-year-old Christian Ademik hanged himself after streaking prank left him “facing expulsion and being put on sex offender registry” in Huntsville, AL (2013).

We know better According to the American Psychological Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Council of State Governments, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Out-of-school youth are more likely to: Drop out of school Be retained a grade Engage in delinquent behavior Become involved in the juvenile and criminal justice systems

We know better Schoolwide effects: Lower scores on standardized tests Greater teacher dissatisfaction No proven gains in safety Russell Skiba et al., American Psychological Association Zero Tolerance Task Force, Are Zero Tolerance Policies Effective in the Schools? An Evidentiary Review and Recommendations (2006).

Disenfranchised youth are hit the hardest Students with disabilities are roughly twice as likely to receive out-of-school punishment compared to their non-disabled peers. LGBTQ students are likely to receive harsher disciplinary punishment than their straight- identified peers. Students in foster care are three times more likely to be suspended or expelled than students in the care of a guardian.

Students of color are the most affected African-American students are three-and-a-half times as likely to be suspended or expelled as their white peers. Latino students are one-and-a-half times as likely to be suspended and twice as likely to be expelled as their white peers. Race is a predictive factor in who will receive a discretionary suspension, even when adjusting for other demographic differences. (Council of State Governments)

Two levels of disproportionality in discipline systems Race is not Neutral: Disproportionality in School Discipline Russell Skiba, Robert H. Horner, Choong-Geun Chung Karega Rausch,, Seth L. May, and Tary Tobin  Journal of School Psychology Analysis of office discipline referral data from the school-wide information system  436 elementary and middle schools  205,932 students who received office discipline referrals  Referrals organized by student ethnicity, type of problem behavior, and administrative decision.

Two levels of disproportionality in discipline systems First Finding: Students from Hispanic/Latino and African American backgrounds were more likely to be sent to the office than their white peers.

Two levels of disproportionality in discipline systems First Finding: Students from Hispanic/Latino and African American backgrounds were more likely to be sent to the office than their white peers. Second Finding: If students from Hispanic/Latino or African American backgrounds were sent to the office, they were more likely than white students to receive a consequence that resulted in their being removed from school (suspension/expulsion)

Two levels of disproportionality in discipline systems

Subjective vs. Objective Offenses White students more often referred for: Smoking Vandalism Leaving without permission Obscene language African-American students more often referred for: Disrespect Excessive noise Threat Loitering

Racial Discipline Gap: Middle Schools Slide drawn from Dan Losen (Civil Rights Project), Using Race and Gender Data to Identify Overuse of Discipline and to Effectively Drive Remedies, Civil Rights and School Discipline Conference, Sept

Suspended Education: Middle Schools in Crisis 15 of 18 urban districts (in sample) suspended more than 30% of Black male middle school students. 175 middle schools in the 18 districts suspended more than a third of Black males. 84 middle schools suspended over 50% of black males. Many schools had rates this high for other racial/gender groups. Slide drawn from Dan Losen (Civil Rights Project), Using Race and Gender Data to Identify Overuse of Discipline and to Effectively Drive Remedies, Civil Rights and School Discipline Conference, Sept

Question How can we close the “achievement gap” or end the “dropout crisis” if students aren’t allowed in school?

Federal Guidance on School Discipline On January 8 th, the U.S. Departments of Education and Justice released joint policy guidance on how they are enforcing federal civil rights laws to ensure that school discipline is handled in a nondiscriminatory manner. Photo: Guidance release in Baltimore, MD.

A Bold and Necessary Step  The Departments acknowledge that “racial discrimination in school discipline is a real problem” and substantial racial disparities in discipline data are not explained by more frequent or more serious misbehavior by students of color.  The Departments acknowledge that without change; there will continue to be long-term, serious consequences; and a direct funnel of students into the school-to-prison pipeline.

School Discipline Guidance Package  Dear Colleague Letter: clarifies the civil rights obligations of school districts to discipline without discrimination on the basis of race, color, or national origin  Guiding Principles with action steps  Directory of Federal Resources  Compendium: State by State Database of School Discipline Laws and Regulations [online and searchable]

Breakout Session Preview Unpacking the Departments’ of Education and Justice School Discipline Guidance Package Breakout Session IA (11am) What’s in the guidance? How are advocates and educators using the guidance? How can you use the guidance in New York?

Who is welcome in our schools?

Contact Information Matt Cregor Staff Attorney Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Economic Justice