Skip to main content

Will School-Discipline Reform Actually Change Anything? [TheAtlantic.com]

lead_960

 

Christine Rodriguez vividly recalls her early school years. A native of Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighborhood, a working-class predominantly black and Latino section of New York City, her most vivid memories of elementary school consist of crammed classrooms with inadequate books, insufficient chairs, and the constant presence of the school-safety agent. (School Safety Agents, or SSAs, are New York Police Department officers assigned to K-12 campuses and charged with protecting students, campus staff, and visitors.) Now a college freshman at The New School studying education, Rodriguez rattles off with ease how school discipline shaped her K-12 education. 

“We go to schools where there are more SSAs than guidance counselors. For us, it makes us feel that they expect us to end up in jail rather than in college,” said Rodriguez, 17. “I’ve been to public school my whole life. I’ve experienced the school-to-prison pipeline”—a term commonly used to describe the trend in which largely disadvantaged students are funneled into the criminal-justice system—“and criminalization (of students). And I’ve questioned why all of these things happen to our communities.”

 

[For more of this story, written by Melinda D. Anderson, go to http://www.theatlantic.com/edu...nge-anything/405157/]

Attachments

Images (1)
  • lead_960

Add Comment

Comments (2)

Newest · Oldest · Popular

If this reporter knew more about research around childhood adversity and trauma-informed schools, this would have been a more useful article. 

Until districts, schools, and individual educators are held to non-punitive, non compliance based standards in a way that makes them take notice as standardized testing results do, there likely won't be  long term change.

 

Spending as much Professional Development time on it as they do to administering student tests would be a start. Until then, we can tell educators what they should be doing, but they will either continue to do as they believe, or even if they do want to make that change (hopefully most of them), they will fall back on what they know when they get stumped.

Post
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×