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Doril Sanders – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Zero-tolerance in school disciplinary procedures impacts or contributes to the nationwide school-to-prison pipeline (STPP). According to the American Bar, school prison incarceration rates in the United States (U.S.) have been correlated to the excessive practices of school disciplinary policies. The U.S. incarcerates more citizens than any other…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Meta Analysis, Disproportionate Representation, Racism
Meghann Ramsey – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The original design of zero-tolerance policies was meant to support school safety through an anti-drug and violence campaign but in the years following their implementation, school districts have employed them repeatedly without merit. Exclusionary practices have become controversial, leading to high rates of recidivism, imbalanced implementation…
Descriptors: Zero Tolerance Policy, Discipline Policy, Suspension, Disproportionate Representation
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Lustick, Hilary – Urban Education, 2021
Suspension rates for students of color are higher than for White students, even in schools that utilize alternatives to suspension like restorative practices. This study draws on data from a year-long multicase ethnography that sought to elucidate why such disproportionality prevails in schools that use restorative practices. This article focuses…
Descriptors: Discipline, Urban Schools, Public Schools, Disproportionate Representation
Heather M. Thompson – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Current zero-tolerance discipline policies are ineffective and contribute to disproportionality in school discipline. Restorative justice practices (RJP) are an equitable alternative approach to exclusionary practices. RJP has been used in schools prior to adequate research informing implementation, which has led to variability in implementation…
Descriptors: Racial Attitudes, Racism, Whites, Program Implementation
Paula Nicole Palmer – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The problem addressed in this study is that zero-tolerance policies impact African-American female students through suspension, expulsions, and law enforcement referrals more than their White counterparts. The purpose of this quantitative causal-comparative ex post facto study was to determine if a significant difference exists in the exclusionary…
Descriptors: Discipline, Elementary Secondary Education, African American Students, Females
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Kimberly Battjes; Lilly Zane Kaplan – Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal, 2023
As schools across the United States begin to move away from the harsh Zero Tolerance policies that characterised the better part of the previous three decades, there is an opportunity to change the focus of school discipline. Frequently, school discipline policies are centred on punitive approaches that separate students from their peers. Rather…
Descriptors: Zero Tolerance Policy, Alienation, Interpersonal Relationship, Educational Quality
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Marsh, L. Trenton S.; Walker, Larry J. – Teachers College Record, 2022
Background/Context: Embedded in "common sense" and state-mandated reforms to close "the achievement gap," the urban school, especially those sites with a no-excuses orientation to learning, can produce and reproduce the carceral state in students' lives. The seemingly innocuous policies and processes limit access to educational…
Descriptors: Blacks, African American Students, Hispanic American Students, Males
Cara M. DiClemente – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Zero tolerance policies were designed to create safety by implementing automatic exclusion (e.g., suspensions, expulsions) for misbehavior in response to rising school violence in the United States. However, evidence over the past four decades shows that these policies fail to increase objective and subjective safety, and instead foster poor…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Multi Tiered Systems of Support, Discipline Policy, Intervention
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Ann Marie Cotman – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2024
The school-to-prison pipeline (STPP) describes in shorthand the problematic relationship between some students' school experiences and their subsequent incarceration. One summer, in response to vocal concerned parents, a suburban school board adopted a zero-tolerance policy for smoking and vaping. Through the combined effects of the zero-tolerance…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Zero Tolerance Policy, Parent Attitudes, Parent Participation
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María Reina Santiago-Rosario; Sean C. Austin; Sara Izzard; M. Kathleen Strickland-Cohen; John C. R. Gallo; Alexandra Newson; Kent McIntosh – Preventing School Failure, 2024
In this article, the authors discuss zero tolerance policies and implications for those they affect most, namely students of color (e.g., Black, American Indian, Latino/a/e) and students with disabilities. First, we present a brief history of the use of zero tolerance policies in school discipline and review the literature on their effects.…
Descriptors: Zero Tolerance Policy, Student Behavior, Minority Group Students, Students with Disabilities
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Farinde-Wu, Abiola; Butler, Bettie Ray; Allen-Handy, Ayana – Gender and Education, 2022
Studies have documented the ubiquitous racial disparities in school discipline. However, knowledge of the unique and complex disciplinary experiences of Black girls, shared from their own voices, remains under-researched. To better understand the school policing and 'pushout' phenomenon for Black girls, this qualitative study examines data which…
Descriptors: African American Students, Females, Urban Schools, Gender Bias
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Hines, Erik M.; Ford, Donna Y.; Fletcher, Edward C.; Moore, James L. – Theory Into Practice, 2022
In this article, we present an extensive overview of inequities in three areas of education: (1) gifted and talented education; (2) accelerated coursework; (3) and discipline. Intersectionality undergirds our focus on these three areas as they go together to paint a disturbing picture of the experiences of Black children in P-12 schools, as well…
Descriptors: Racism, Blacks, African American Students, Preschool Education
Rafa, Alyssa – Education Commission of the States, 2019
Exclusionary discipline -- suspensions or expulsions that remove students from the learning environment -- can have long-lasting, negative impacts on a student's trajectory. Research suggests that students who are suspended or expelled suffer academically and are more likely to drop out and be involved in the criminal justice system later in life.…
Descriptors: State Policy, Suspension, Expulsion, Elementary Secondary Education
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Hassan, Hamida Hussein; Carter, Vernon Brooks – Education and Urban Society, 2021
The school-to-prison pipeline represents an educational environment that allows public schools to push many at-risk children out of school and into the juvenile justice or the adult criminal justice system. Consequently, this study explores the disproportionate rates of discipline when comparing Black and White female students in the national…
Descriptors: Discipline, Disproportionate Representation, At Risk Students, African American Students
Albritton, Kizzy; Cruz, Kenia; Townsend, Cierra – Communique, 2020
The issue of preschool discipline disproportionality continues to garner national attention. This paper outlines challenges associated with disproportionate disciplinary practices and specific roles for school psychologists in addressing the complex issues related to preschool discipline disproportionality.
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Role, Change Agents, At Risk Students
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