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The Trauma of Coercion: Disabled Elementary School Students and 'Isolation Boxes'

 

In the fall of 2017, news of the six-by-six bare pine boxes—which have, in their various forms, been called "seclusion enclosures," "isolation booths," "isolation boxes," and "time-out rooms"—used to confine elementary school students in eastern Iowa, sometimes for over an hour at a time, went viral. As the headlines mounted, angry parents learned they did not legally have to be informed of such measures if taken against their children by educators. Critics contended that the use of these boxes amounted to solitary confinement.

There have been a flurry of cases involving isolation boxes over the last six years. In 2012, parents at Longview's Mint Valley Elementary School in Washington state were scandalized by the alleged use of a padded cell. In 2014, schools in the Mansfield Independent School District in the Dallas-Fort Worth area were found to place students in windowless, concrete "recovery rooms" around 800 times over the course of the 2013–14 school year; their stays in the cells sometimes spanned hours, even an entire school day. Special education students, it was noted, were often singled out for confinement in recovery rooms. In 2016, parents in Kansas were enraged after a fourth-grader was kept in one such box as punishment for being disruptive in class.

There have been other questionable methods used to punish school students. More recently, an Indiana nine-year-old with autism made headlines after being handcuffed and arrested by police on campus. The story, like so many others, became one of competing narratives: The nine-year-old's family claims he was defending himself against violent bullying, and the school claims the child himself was violent against a teacher and other students.

[For more on this story by LAURA DORWART, go to https://psmag.com/education/di...-and-isolation-boxes]

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Our son can recall in great detail - color of the chair, who was doing what, ETC when his friend, with autism, was placed in a locked "box" like space almost daily while in elementary school.  The student would be crying, wailing, pleading to be let out.... without any response from school staff.  All the students in the class were vicariously traumatized by this experience.   Imagine the trauma a student with very limited verbal communication abilities must have felt.....  (I have to bold this text, because regular font just does not convey the gravity of this situation) 

Fifteen or so years later - our son can still recall this with vivid clarity.  Enough so that he could also be called as a witness ...... his friend's family asked him to described what happened and after nearly a decade of legal delays that family prevailed .... our son was one of the witnesses.  

In some ways being asked if he would be willing to be a witness, and using his strong memory for a positive purpose - had a healing - restorative - effect.   

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