Aldine boots nearly three times as many students as neighboring Houston ISD — which expelled 181 students in 2008-09 — even though its enrollment, about 67,000, is only a third the size. The forced-out students get processed into either the Harris County Juvenile Justice Alternative Education Program or one of two “very strict” special schools run by the Harris County Department of Education, an unusual agency that provides services to area districts but runs no schools for the general public, according to agency spokeswoman Carol Vaughn. An additional 1,399 students were shipped off to a district alternative program — not technically expelled but removed from traditional classes....
“They’re being treated like they’ve committed a crime when maybe they’ve just been disruptive in class,” Fowler said in an interview. “And that increases the likelihood that they will penetrate the criminal justice system further.”
And that system, often as not, is being populated with minority students committing low-level offenses. When Texas Appleseed pointed to that disparity in an earlier report, it ignited a backlash claiming the statistics did not prove discrimination — but rather that minority students simply commit more offenses warranting expulsion, Fowler said. So this time, researchers took a finer cut of the data to explore the issue further. What it found, Fowler said, tended to throw cold water on the backlash. When looking only at mandatory expulsions — those for serious “zero tolerance” offenses outlined clearly in state law, such as weapons incidents, drug-dealing and sexual assaults, African-Americans are expelled in proportions equal to their overall proportions of enrollment. But when researchers probe data on discretionary expulsions — for less serious offenses involving judgment calls by districts — the proportion of African-American student expulsions rises sharply.
Indeed, the more subjective the criteria, the more African-Americans get expelled. Black students accounted for 14 percent of the state’s mandatory suspensions, exactly matching the percentage of all black students. That figure rises to 22 percent when only discretionary expulsions, involving subjective decisions, are examined. And in the most subjective category of discretionary expulsions, for “serious and persistent misbehavior,” black students account for 31 percent — more than double their presence in the student body at large.
The data on Hispanic students shows a different, in some ways opposite, trend. They are overrepresented moderately in the discretionary expulsions — 52 percent compared with 47 percent of total enrollment — but represent an even higher proportion of less subjective mandatory expulsions: 66 percent, according to the report.
This blog is a prime example of a little bit of knowledge being a dangerous thing.
ReplyDeleteHere is a fact: State law requires drug offenders to be either mandatorily removed from school or discretionarily expelled from school.
Here's another fact: Other districts mandatorily remove students to alternative discipline schools for 30 to 60 days.
Another fact: Instead of removing them for 30-60 days, Aldine discretionarily expels drug offenders to its in-district disciplinary school for one (yes, that's 1) day, where they get drug counseling. Then, those students return to their home campuses on a voluntary behavior contract, allowing them to be randomly drug tested.
Fact: Wile Aldine's formerly expelled kids now are sitting in their regular classrooms, the other district's kids are sitting in an alternative campus.
Fact: Taking out those 1-day drug kids who were so horribly mistreated with a (*gasp*) 1-day expulsion, Aldine's ratio of expelled students is below the state average.
Fact: The mandatory removal ratio of Aldine is dramatically below the state average.
Fact: It's easy for people with agendas to attack Aldine when they don't know what the underlying facts are.