Broward County Public Schools Superintendent Robert Runcie
says changes in school discipline policies led to better academic
outcomes.COURTESY OF BROWARD COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS5 hours
LATINO
Bold Lesson: Florida School District Swaps Cops for
Counseling
BY RAUL A. REYES
A couple of years after arriving as superintendent of the
Broward County Public Schools, Robert Runcie turned the district’s discipline
policies upside down.
“Looking at the glaring expulsion, arrest and dropout rates
for our black and Latino students, I knew that we had to do something
dramatically different,” Runcie said.
He did away with calling in police for non-violent problems
that could be handled by school officials in Fort Lauderdale-area schools that
make up Florida’s sixth-largest school district.
Instead, he emphasized alternative approaches for the
student body that is 29 percent Latino and 40 percent African-American.
Students were referred to social workers and substance-abuse counselors.
Detentions were held on Saturdays, in-school suspensions were used more,
students were made to agree to behavior contracts and some were made to pay for
any costs associated with misbehavior or to do community service.
The overhaul seems to be working, Runcie said.
“In terms of results, what we’ve seen so far is very
encouraging,” he said. “Suspensions are down 66 percent, expulsions by 55
percent, and arrests by about 45 percent.”
Latino dropout rates nationwide are decreasing — a study of
high school graduation rates found 78 percent of Hispanics graduated high
school in 2010, an increase from 64 percent in 2000. A disciplinary approach
which keeps students in the schools is important, said Patricia Gándara, co-director
of the Civil Rights Project of University of California, Los Angeles.
Students were referred to social workers and substance-abuse
counselors. Detentions were held on Saturdays, and in-school suspensions were
used more."Removing so many poorly performing or problem students from our
schools only encourages them to drop out and turns a school problem into a
societal problem," she stated.
Mirian Lopez, whose freshman son attends South Broward High
School, said she has seen the benefits of this approach. Her son did go through
suspension for an incident but also has been going to a counseling group.
"He came home and said how lucky he was compared to
other students who had so many problems at home," said Lopez in Spanish.
"He realized what he did was dumb...I think talking to an adult who is not
his parents or grandmother has been helpful. Sometimes they listen more to a
different adult," she added.
About 700 Broward County students have gone through the
district’s new discipline program, with only 25-30 repeating it. “That tells us
students are learning to change their behavior,” Runcie said, “and ultimately
we hope to see improved achievement and graduation rates.”
Like Broward County, other school districts with significant
Latino student populations have been rethinking their approach to school
discipline. In 2013, the Los Angeles Unified School District, which is 73
percent Latino, revised its school discipline procedures. School districts in
Baltimore, Chicago and Denver have also reformed their discipline policies,
moving away from “zero tolerance” and towards more creative solutions.
In January, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said
secondary schools have suspended or expelled an estimated two million students
a year, and these punishments are being disproportionately applied to children
of color and students with disabilities.
More than half of students involved in school-related
arrests or referred to law enforcement are African-American or Latino.
A 2011 report by the National Council of La Raza found that
every seven seconds during the school year, a Latino student is suspended; and
that Latino students are 1.5 times more likely to be suspended and twice as
likely to be expelled as their white peers. In Texas, where Hispanics are the
majority in public schools, a groundbreaking longitudinal study found that
nearly six in 10 public school students were suspended or expelled at least
once between seventh and 12th grade.
One of the government’s recommendations to schools is to use
out-of-school suspensions and law enforcement measures only as a last resort.
While many Latino educators and policy experts support the
new guidelines on school discipline, some are concerned that there are
practical obstacles to their implementation.
Pedro Noguera, professor of sociology at New York
University, said that doing otherwise can lead to counterintuitive outcomes.
“If a kid is not doing well or acting out in school, it makes no sense to
remove him from school,” he said. “The best punishment should be more school!”
If kids are not in school, regardless of their discipline problems, they are
not learning, which only makes a bad problem worse, he said.
“When we deny kids access to school based on discipline, we
are denying them their education – and that’s a civil rights violation,”
Noguera said.
While many Latino educators and policy experts support the
new guidelines on school discipline, some are concerned that there are
practical obstacles to their implementation.
Daniel A. Domenech, executive director of the American
Association of School Administrators, worries about the price tag. “While our
response to the guidelines is positive, remember that making such changes
requires staff training. It costs money,” Domenech said. “Doing the right thing
could require resources that many schools and districts simply don’t have.”
Many school districts are operating on tight budgets, feeling the effects of
federal funding cuts and laying off teachers. Under such conditions, complying
with the federal guidelines could be a financial burden, he said.
Still, Domenech is optimistic about the directives from the
Department of Justice and Department of Education. “The combination of factors
involved here shows that school discipline reflects not just an educational
issue, but a larger societal issue,” he said. “The time has come to correct a
lot of systemic problems, and having the government step up to get involved is
a huge step in the right direction.”
First published February 6th 2014, 2:56 am
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