iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Gara LaMarche

GET UPDATES FROM Gara LaMarche
 

The Time Is Right to End "Zero Tolerance" in Schools

Posted: 04/11/11 03:38 PM ET

It is too early to know whether the current wave of school reforms will lead to lasting improvements in student achievement. But it is not too early to note that many of these reforms have a troubling consequence: a doubling-down on harsh, ineffective zero-tolerance discipline policies. All too often, the debate about school reform has wrongly emphasized pushing troubled children out of school, rather than making systemic improvements so that all students have the support they need to learn.

For that reason, advocates nationwide are embracing efforts to improve school climate. School leaders are recognizing the ineffectiveness of zero tolerance. And as states grapple with untenable youth-prison budgets and Congress prepares to debate reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, a movement is building to end the ineffective, expensive, and tragic era of zero tolerance.

Nationwide, suspension and expulsion rates are at crisis levels. The most recent data from the National Center on Education Statistics showed that more than 3.3 million students were suspended or expelled in 2006 -- nearly one in 14. Of those, fewer than one in 10 were for violent offenses. The vast majority were for vague, noncriminal offenses, such as tardiness, talking back to a teacher, or violating dress codes.

For students of color, the crisis is even more extreme: In 2006, about 15 percent of black students were suspended, compared with 7 percent of Hispanic students and 5 percent of white students, according to NCES data. That year, about 0.5 percent of blacks were expelled from school, compared with 0.2 percent of Hispanic students and 0.1 percent of white students. Many of these suspensions are the result of excessively punitive discipline policies. Mirroring tactics used in the adult criminal-justice system and the "war on drugs," many school districts embraced practices that emphasize the long-term exclusion of students who violate school rules. Schools are relying more and more on the police and juvenile courts to address school-based behavior that used to be handled by educators.

In New York City, a recent analysis by the New York Civil Liberties Union revealed that suspensions of 4- to 10-year-olds have increased 76 percent since 2003.

In Colorado, two friends horsing around dented a locker and were charged with felony mischief and third-degree assault, according to the Washington-based Advancement Project.
In Virginia, a plastic pellet spit through a straw led to assault charges and expulsion, The Washington Post reported.

In a zero-tolerance school, that's it.

Sadly, zero-tolerance policies are as ineffective as they are prevalent. Research shows that they fail to improve student behavior. Even worse, these policies deny students access to desperately needed services, while dramatically increasing the likelihood of future involvement with the juvenile-justice system -- especially for students of color.

This is what's known as the "school-to-prison pipeline." The United States now has the world's highest incarceration rate, and the number of juveniles in detention has swelled in recent decades. In the United States, more black men ages 18 to 24 live in prison cells than college dorm rooms, according to U.S. Census data.

Nationwide, some districts are implementing positive preventative approaches to school discipline. The programs vary, but all are based on similar principles:

• Creating respectful and welcoming school environments;

• Teaching positive behavior skills and conflict resolution; and

• Expanding access to academic and counseling services for children and families.

These programs equip students with essential skills, reducing their chances of entering the juvenile-justice system. And they cost less to implement than the cost of incarcerating a child in a juvenile-detention facility. Perhaps most importantly, these programs help all children learn better, not just the ones who may be struggling in school.

In Baltimore, a focus on positive discipline helped improve attendance and achievement rates among black males most at risk of dropping out. In Indiana and Louisiana, two states plagued by notoriously violent youth-prison systems, a shift is under way to discourage suspensions and expulsions. In Clayton County, Ga., and Birmingham, Ala., family-court judges led efforts to establish protocols between schools, law enforcement, and local service agencies that improved school attendance and decreased school-based referrals to the courts. This trend is promising.

This year, Congress is likely to take up the reauthorization of the ESEA, the federal government's main vehicle for helping to fund K-12 public education. The Obama administration's blueprint for the ESEA, which the president laid out last year, maintains an emphasis on testing in promoting school accountability.

On the one hand, standardized testing seems to have exposed the poor quality of education in many of our nation's schools and the urgent need for reform. But the increasing pressure to raise test scores also has encouraged the practice of pushing "problem" children out of school. This is not the fault of educators -- it is the product of a set of systemic incentives.
The reauthorization of the ESEA is a critical moment for discipline reform. Abolishing zero tolerance is essential to closing the door on the school-to-prison pipeline, and creates an opportunity for a frank national conversation about what schools can and should be doing to support achievement -- especially for children of color.

At the state level, the budget crises gripping governments have led to reform. In New York and California, new governors are pledging to shut most youth prisons, investing instead in more effective alternatives that will reduce school-based arrests and referrals into the juvenile-justice system.

At the local level, students and parents are coming together to demand an end to zero tolerance. A recent report, "Zero Tolerance in Philadelphia," was co-authored by the student-led Youth United for Change and the Advancement Project. The report received significant national media attention, and many observers said they were inspired by the students' passion to advocate on their own behalf.

These efforts are supported by national advocacy organizations, including the Dignity in Schools coalition, the Alliance for Educational Justice, and The Advancement Project, which are calling for federal action to improve discipline data collection and monitoring and to provide resources to help districts adopt more effective strategies for improving discipline.

My organization, The Atlantic Philanthropies, is investing in this national push for positive discipline alternatives by promoting federal advocacy while supporting efforts such as those in Philadelphia, where the people most affected are organizing against zero tolerance. Through the Just and Fair Schools fund at the New York-based nonprofit Public Interest Projects, we now fund 21 grassroots organizing groups that are working to improve discipline practices in 14 states.

Our long-term goals are to reduce expulsion and suspension rates, raise achievement, and dramatically reduce the pernicious disparities affecting students of color. We hope our support will inspire other funders to step forward at this critical moment.

Nearly 10 years ago, to deepen my understanding of criminal-justice reform, I spent a sabbatical volunteering at a prison re-entry program for convicted felons. What struck me was how many of these men had made one mistake--as children--and their education simply stopped. This is wrong.

Our hope is that starting now--with the ESEA reauthorization, budget cuts, and burgeoning activism unfolding in front of us--philanthropists, educators, and policymakers will come together to end these ineffective, expensive, and morally corrupt policies, and work to create safe and positive climates in schools that give every student a fair chance to learn.

For more on our efforts to reform zero tolerance, Follow Atlantic on Twitter or Facebook.

Note: A version of this post first appeared in the April 6, 2011 edition of Education Week.

 

Follow Gara LaMarche on Twitter: www.twitter.com/atlantic

 
 
  • Comments
  • 67
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
09:22 AM on 05/29/2011
Too many children are being raised without limits. Until you have seen the mother of a 12 year old argue that her child bringing a loaded handgun to school is no different than a first grader with a water gun and that there should be no difference in discipline (You should have just taken the gun from him - I don't see why should my child be expelled?), you understand why schools have been forced to have zero tollerance policies. Too many parents cry "Not my child", but want every other child to be held accountable. BTW - mommy wanted her gun back.
photo
VA Jill
I'm not perfect and neither are you
06:34 PM on 05/27/2011
Zero Tolerance = Zero Sense. It's that simple.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Uncle Bill
ex-lawyer and teacher
06:04 PM on 05/27/2011
Zero tolerance is simply an admission that zero discernment and judgement will be used in school discipline. Zero tolerance and mandatory sentencing are matching books that deny the ability of wise and experienced persons can arrive at just punishments after reviewing all relevant facts. Yet they depend on those same abilities to determine if the stated offense occurred. Both are aimed at forcing specified outcomes to satisfy political pressure groups regardless of reason or nuance.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
logicaldog
09:12 AM on 04/28/2011
Heres the answer, and its not "rocket-science" but it is fundamental. I work with students and families in therapy all the time who suffer with FCPS at many points in the continuum. It isn't limited to those that are "caught" (entrapped) in the irrational snare of silly zero tolerance policies-it is systemic, it is toxic and it is everywhere in the system like cancer. It comes from the beginning-from the document that should reflect, as it does everywhere else on the planet, "Rights and Responsibilities". Instead, transparently, it is titled, "Responsibilities and Rights". In reality there are NO RIGHTS. It is North Korea, it is a heartless, hateful system that I ask myself, as a therapist everyday, why would these people work with children. The students are just pieces of furniture that administrators have to endure in their places of real estate. The philosophy is whats wrong. There is no trust, respect, care for students. PLEASE READ MY LIPS, these are NOT the bad kids, they are everybodies kids and it really has nothing to do with them. It is the starting place. This system is flawed, inherently. It should be torn down, and it WAS better with the prior superintendent, who seemed to have a real heart not a stainless steel appliance of some kind.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:44 PM on 04/13/2011
“My organization, The Atlantic Philanthropies, is investing in this national push for positive discipline alternatives by promoting federal advocacy while supporting efforts such as those in Philadelphia, where the people most affected are organizing against zero tolerance.”

How about “ZERO Tolerance on Corporal Punishment and Bullying”
Teachers must stop Beating children and ignoring the serious psychological and physical effects of Bullying!

There's a direct relationship from poor performance, violence, drug addiction, self mutilation, suicide and school shootings to Corporal Punishment and Bullying. They are in an environment that doesn't protect them from violence! (pain)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/09/marc-ecko-corporal-punishment_n_833623.htmlhttp://unlimitedjustice.com
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/04/01/alye-pollacks-bullying-video_n_843649.html
http://www.bullyonline.org/schoolbully/
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glockman
01:27 PM on 04/12/2011
"The new education must consist essentially in this, that it completely destroys freedom of will in the soil which it undertakes to cultivate, and produces on the contrary strict necessity in the decisions of the will, the opposite being impossible. Such a will can henceforth be relied on with confidence and certainty. " -Fichte

"If you want to influence him at all, you must do more than merely talk to him ; you must fashion him, and fashion him in such a way that he simply cannot will otherwise than you wish him to will. "

-Fichte

Horace Mann visited Prussia in 1843 to study their new form of compulsory public education. This form of education in Prussia came directly from Fichte's urgings in the "Addresses to the German Nation." Mann became enamored of this system, and brought it back with him to the US where he became the "father of modern education." He brought Fichte's philosophy of education back with him.
photo
VA Jill
I'm not perfect and neither are you
01:02 PM on 04/12/2011
As my ex-husband used to say, zero tolerance usually means zero sense.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HockeyMom
I was here before SP and will be long after her.
09:57 AM on 04/12/2011
Zero Tolerance equals an eye for an eye, nothing more. It's the lowest form of punishment merited out by non-thinking administrators. Why have administration when you can just call the cops?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Recovering CPA
09:32 AM on 04/12/2011
At Little Village Academy, a public school on Chicago's West Side, students are not allowed to pack lunches from home. Unless they have a medical excuse, they must eat the food served in the cafeteria.

Principal Elsa Carmona said her intention is to protect students from their own unhealthful food choices.

More and more, it seems like parental malpractice to let your kids go to public schools, where they seem to be viewed as state property, and guinea pigs for social experimentation.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glockman
12:00 PM on 04/12/2011
What do you mean "viewed" as state property. They are state property. Schools are mills for producing obedient, faithful party line voters, and as the article stated, grist for the prison system.

Schools used to exist to simply produce mindless drones for America's factories, but since factories are nearly an extinct beast, we produce drones for other things.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Campbell
09:18 AM on 04/12/2011
It is past time to finally realize that the factory/academic school model is not appropriate, never really was, but now is nothing more than a 12 year prison sentence for the crime of being young. No reform that is being implemented truly reforms but simply tinkers with this out-dated institution.We have working models of real education but they are not even being considered, just more of the same.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
glockman
12:01 PM on 04/12/2011
Real education is dangerous to the ruling class.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
David Campbell
08:28 AM on 04/13/2011
How right you are!
09:12 AM on 04/12/2011
Sigh. If only . . .

It is more efficient and easier to administer a school with Zero-Tol. Actually trying to provide an environment for positive change takes money and effort. I hate to be a doomsayer, but that is NEVER GOING TO HAPPEN. Every year school districts have to be forced to provide the materials necessary for basic instruction, and there are always groups of parents that think schools can be run for less.

Teachers who DO give a damn are eventually overwhelmed or burned out by a system and administrators that are focused on the bottom line. It is ugly and damn near universal. And the only way it will change is if people experience a sea-change in their priorities. This, in an environment where that 1% with 90% of stuff wants even more stuff. Not. Going. To happen.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sawyer0413
Corporate Learning & Performance Expert
09:09 AM on 04/12/2011
Thank You for an excellent post. Intuitively, it has always seemed to me to be a bad idea for zero tolerance, in the schools or in society in general. When someone is cornered, they can act completely irrational. Zero tolerance seems to escalate the "cornering" of someone. When they realize they are already in deep trouble, they seem to just escalate from there. Thank You for providing insight into the data that backs this up. It gives me data to use when I talk to my local school officials.
photo
RuralRoute1
Kennedy Democrat, George Carlin Catholic
07:27 AM on 04/12/2011
My son's clean, middle of the test score pack suburban high school is a medium security facility where it's not uncommon to be locked down, unable to even go to the bathroom unescorted, while State Police sweep through them with drug dogs. A fast trot to get to your next class, trying to cover what may be close to 1/2 mile, can land you in detention. Zero tolerance permeates and poisons the entire enterprise, from the demoralized, hand washing Pontius Pilate administrators, who know better, to the students, who are being kneecapped and taught to fear.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
09:14 AM on 04/12/2011
There is a drug problem even in rural school districts. I would say that administrators knowingly underestimate the severity. The less parents know the better from their perspective. The issue is compounded in urban districts. Most everyone knows what part of town must be avoided and the reasons why. Many of those reasons step off the bus everyday and enter into the school building. The police substations in many of these schools meet a real often camouflaged need. Again, management puts the best face on it. The police there are called "resource officers" or some other innocuous moniker. The school in such a place is a food chain and the staff is not always near the top. The parents do not understand what they are sending their children into. The immunity of the public school from criminal activity is probably no better than the society outside. The problems of public schools won't be solved by the host of errant efforts using a politically correct compass for direction.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
11:54 PM on 04/11/2011
Why screw around with brick-and-mortar, anymore? I can see continuing with K-6 and a tangible classroom presence, but given the miracle of the Information Age, they can start mothballing these school buildings. Furlough some teachers, put em on unemployment, help em find a new job, but it's a New Age, time to start doing things differently instead of reinforcing the traditional educator-bureaucrat model. Independent study is a darn sight more efficient, come right down to it. Do students maybe miss out on some of that great socialization? Well, maybe, but maybe that socialization isn't so great either. China's out there, they have more internet users than we've got citizens, and they really don't care. New day, do things a new way.
09:46 AM on 04/12/2011
It will be great for those students that can learn in such an environment. Of course, nothing is stopping you from homeschooling today.
09:55 PM on 04/11/2011
Zero Tolerance programs are usually followed by Zero Intelligence programs. It goes for all sides. From ZT for drugs resulting in kids being suspended for aspirin to a 6th grader being suspended for snapping a bra strap under ZT for sexual harassment. The whole thing is both silly & dangerous at the same time. Like there isn't an adult in the house capable of making a judgment.
ByAndForThePeople
and corporations aren't people!
11:03 PM on 04/11/2011
It's beginning to look like that aren't any adults in the House (of Reps, that is) capable of making a rational judgment!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
11:59 PM on 04/11/2011
I get the general impression that what they really have is a bunch of 6-figure government behavior nazis. If they're not drug-testing your kid, they're trying some kind of mind-trip on em.  I say de-fund the education apparatus until the focus on education and learning is restored. If your kid's not learning, screwing off, not doing their homework for whatever reason, YOU, the parent, get to deal with it, and read the suspension notice, and administer the butt-beatings.  Kids with conduct problems need the only kind of reinforcement that'll really make a dent in it: Parental.  

I think there should be quarterly PTA meetings, where parents AND teachers, and maybe the kids in grand public assembly, talk about 'the competition' overseas. Slacking through school was once 'ok'. Not anymore, not if you intend on being employed after leaving high school. The Real World doesn't 'play'. And, if you're on the high side of 6th grade, playtime's over.