By Will Flanders
Sunday, March 31, 2024
Recently, a furor erupted in Milwaukee Public Schools
over new data showing that suspension rates were up —
particularly for African-American students. Other jurisdictions such as New York City and Washington, D.C. have seen similar increases in the number
of suspensions since before the pandemic. In each case, education officials and
local media weep and gnash their teeth at the supposed injustice.
But is this upward trend actually a bad thing? Is it
reflective of an authoritarian turn in schools or a deterioration of and
response to worsened student behavior?
It marks the reversal of a downward trend in suspension rates after schools spent
the better part of a decade deconstructing their behavioral codes. This
no-consequence approach to discipline went under variable names: restorative
justice, positive behavior interventions and supports, or teaching with love
and logic.
In each case, the practices start with a few wrongheaded
notions. First, any disparities in the rate of discipline among different
racial groups must be due to racism on the part of school administrators.
Second, misbehavior is seen not as a problem to be solved but rather as a form
of “communication” that must be understood. Johnny bit Timmy
because he doesn’t get enough hugs at home. To punish him, then, is inherently
unjust. Finally, the ultimate goal of these alternative approaches is to keep
the misbehaving child in the classroom — ostensibly so that they can continue
to learn.
The Departments of Education and Justice first spurred
this trend away from consequence in 2014, when they investigated numerous
school districts with disparate suspension rates. Milwaukee was subject to one
such investigation and saw suspensions decline dramatically by the time the
investigation was closed — from about 22 percent in 2011 to 14 percent in 2015.
In other jurisdictions such as New York City, suspension rates plummeted 50 percent. Under President Trump, enforcement declined,
but under President Biden, new guidance has been released that
may see renewed interest in district investigations.
Ask any teacher and they’ll tell you the results of this
trend: chaos, violence, and general disorder. Last year, one of this piece’s
authors worked at a school that had made a commitment to move away from
suspensions and other forms of punitive discipline. By year’s end, a third of
the staff had quit, and every single one of these teachers cited behavior as
the primary reason.
Certainly, life circumstances can foster misbehavior, and
children from broken homes deserve compassion. But compassion that metastasizes
into leniency condemns the other 29 students in a classroom to deteriorating
safety and academic achievement. What does permissiveness communicate to
students? That the adults in the building expect nothing better from them and
that anyone who follows the rules is a chump.
This isn’t just anecdotal evidence — there is ample
research to back up the claim that soft discipline is harmful to other students
in the class. Research for the Wisconsin Institute for Law &
Liberty, conducted by one of the authors, found that students report feeling
less safe in schools as suspension rates decline. And when students don’t feel
safe in school, there are inevitably other negative effects. Academic research has found that leaving disruptive
students unpunished in the classroom leads to broader academic declines for
other students and even a decline in the support students have for one another.
We’ve learned this lesson in the broader debates over
policing. As police pull back, crime rates spike. The same laws apply to human
behavior in the classroom even if the infractions and subsequent punishments
are less severe. “Abolish the police” crumbled under political headwinds, but
that same philosophy has been promulgated in K–12 schools without challenge.
And while galling videos of hallway brawls or ruthless
beatings make headlines and go viral, a minority of students will suffer such
violence. Every child in a school, though, must deal with the anxiety of an
unsafe building or the frustration at another cruel remark, another teacher
impotently trying to quiet the class down, or another academic hour wasted.
Suspending students should never be the first choice —
and it never is for school administrators. There is nothing at all wrong with
parents and teachers working together to try to improve student behavior. But
when these strategies don’t work, there must be a mechanism to ensure that one
student’s bad day doesn’t compromise the learning of every other student in the
classroom.
School districts across the country appear to be
relearning what’s obvious to any sensible observer: Well-run schools require
discipline. Districts from Las Vegas to the entire State of Florida are enacting laws and policies to bolster
their discipline codes and empower teachers to maintain control of their
classrooms.
These are heartening trends. Teachers and administrators
working to create an environment conducive to learning should be supported —
not cut off at the knees.
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