Shayna Cook
Policy Analyst, Early & Elementary Education
Can you imagine being labeled as a 鈥渂ad kid鈥 and being removed from your classroom during your first years of school? Madisyn Moore, a six-year-old girl in Chicago Public Schools, felt the weight of this label when she for taking candy off her teacher鈥檚 desk without asking last month. And recently, Dr. Rosemarie Allen from Metropolitan State University of Denver, shared that she herself had been suspended and expelled starting in kindergarten. These discipline practices are stressful experiences for children and their families and can students’ development and health.
Dr. Allen was able to overcome her teachers鈥 low-expectations for her behavior and academic performance. She now researches disparities in discipline practices in the early years. She explains in an with Chalkbeat how children, like herself, feel when they are removed from school, saying, 鈥淏y the time they get to kindergarten and they鈥檝e been kicked out of about two or three facilities, now they鈥檙e already disengaged from the learning process…They鈥檙e disenfranchised even from other kids because now they鈥檙e labeled 鈥渂ad.鈥濃 聽聽聽
Both Madisyn and Dr. Allen are African American girls. African American and Latino students are suspended and expelled at , particularly in the . Young students who are expelled or suspended are as much as to drop out of high school, experience academic failure and grade retention, hold negative school attitudes, and face incarceration than those who are not.
Last week, 国产视频鈥檚 Early & Elementary Education Policy program along with over 30 other organizations signed a against suspension and expulsion in the early years up through third grade. The National Association for the Education of Young Children produced a companion document with resources to help parents and families, teachers and schools, and policymakers end expulsion and suspension in the early years. The Administration for Children and Families also released a highlighting state and local policies that have prevented suspension and expulsion in the early years to show that it can be done.
Suspension and expulsion in the early years and grades is not an intervention to help child behavior. In fact, as Dr. Walter Gilliam of the Yale Child Study Center has stated, 鈥渟uspension and expulsion are adult decisions.鈥 More appropriate discipline interventions include:
Ending the suspension and expulsion of young children is imperative. Students need to view their classroom as a welcoming and safe place where they can make mistakes, learn, and grow without being removed from their school. African American and Latino children are entitled to this opportunity just as much as their white peers. Policymakers and educators should ban suspension and expulsion in the early years and grades and seek alternative and more developmentally-appropriate approaches to disciplining children that may need extra socioemotional support.“