Posted on 12/09/2011 7:14:46 PM PST by Altura Ct.
Superintendent Patricia Green told the Ann Arbor school board that she's taking new steps to close a so-called "discipline gap" and expects by March to outline a comprehensive district-wide plan to reach that goal.
The information was presented Wednesday at a meeting when the Board of Education heard new student suspension data from the 2010-2011 academic year that shows consistent discipline disparity among students of different races and income levels.
Its no secret the district traditionally has had a disproportionate number of black, special needs and economically disadvantaged students be removed or suspended from the classroom, said Board President Deb Mexicotte.
In 2010-2011, nearly 1,200 students were suspended from the districts middle and high schools. Of those students, 42.2 percent were black and 20.5 percent were classified as other, a group officials said included many Hispanics.
Those numbers compare to 33.9 percent for white students, creating a disparity since 8,627, or 52.3 percent, of the districts 16,509 students last year were white. Black students made up 14.3 percent of the entire student body.
The 2010-2011 data also shows that an average of about 35 percent of suspended students have special needs and an average of about 58 percent are economically disadvantaged.
Mexicotte said this issue is something schools nationwide struggle with. But Green has a track record for reducing the number of suspensions in the previous districts she has served.
This makes me believe we really can do this in a way I never have before, Mexicotte said, following a presentation Green gave to trustees.
I believe in your leadership and experience and in the experience of our staff, both old and new.
"And I believe in this board. I believe we finally have all of the right components in place to actually address this.
Green said improving consistency in school-wide practices and policies while educating teachers and administrators on the roles that social and emotional needs can play in misbehavior will diminish the discipline gap at AAPS.
Closing the discipline gap also is critical to eliminating the districts achievement gap, she said.
One thing that caught my attention (when interviewing for the superintendents position) was the achievement gap is being looked at on purely the curriculum side, Green said.
But the other components that are very significant are the emotional and social sides. Social and emotional learning will enhance safe and caring classrooms.
She said students who misbehave are attempting to accomplish one or more of four primary goals: To get attention, to express anger or enact revenge, to show or gain power or to avoid failure. She said many educators fail to recognize and address the purpose of students negative behavior.
There also needs to be an increased awareness of the potential for bias when issuing referrals for discipline, Green said.
The superintendent is working on a more comprehensive course of action, but Green said she has two specific steps she would like to see the district do:
Host professional development days to establish and coach consistent interpretation of offenses and Find ways to increase and promote student leadership opportunities for peer mediation and conflict resolution.
One piece Green already has begun is monthly data collections outlining attendance and disciplinary actions at each school building. She also is piloting a soon-to-be universal form for referring students for disciplinary action. She said the district had at least seven different forms it had been using.
A single, district-wide form is part of her plan to improve consistency and collaboration at AAPS.
Treasurer Irene Patalan said much of Greens presentation resonated with her, especially the part about looking at the data more holistically and looking for patterns to see where the majority of student discipline referrals are coming from. She said, however, if students and staff are going to receive trainings on how to address behavioral issues, she would love it if the board could as well.
Trustee Simone Lightfoot seconded Patalans request. She added while she is happy the administration is developing a plan to address the disproportionality of student suspensions at AAPS, she remains upset by the data.
The numbers are egregious, she said. They are embarrassing and distressing to me. I kept turning the pages (of the report) and was mad and sad and all kinds of things. The numbers are horrible.
I cant stress that enough.
Rod spared, child spoiled.
/johnny
Ann Arbor, 3.5 square miles of idiocy surrounded by sanity.
Make them learn. Try enforcing academic standards.
They need to study the "who knows who his daddy is" gap. An honest regression analysis would show a very high correlation between discipline problems and no daddy. But, the politically correct approach will be to look everywhere else but there.
Simple solution. Forget “racially balanced outcome” and instead suspend or punish students who misbehave. Make the rules for proper behaviour clearly understood and widely distributed.
Behaviour based outcomes. A radical concept in this 21st century.
Where is the sarc/ tab?
Teachers don't have time to diagnose problems. Reminds me of my PhD niece who believes that you can't tell a child what to do; you must present them with options and give them reasons. I told her that was great! I've got an option: do what I said or get your butt whooped. End of options/story. She was NOT amused.
It’s hopeless...
We Are Doomed. (WAD)
Ann Arbor Public (GOVERNMENT)Schools, one expensive, liberal based, F’ed up school system. Teachers and adminstrators here are one of the highest paid and least performing.
Worked for me. ;-)
In other words white kids will face stiffer punishment than minority kids for the same things.
wow.
If they want to 'close the gap' they must work it from that direction.
I wonder if there is much of anything that whites will say no to? Will they just continue to debase themselves, their children and culture?
Actually this is why conservatives need to recognize the importance of Michigan. We produce more of America’s teachers than any other state.
The GOP better get interested in what goes on here.
/johnny
Discipline gap?, whites aren’t punished as much as blacks? Is it because whites have 2 parents, or is it because LaZackery (or whatever the moms name them) come home to a drug house?
why don’t they just go to the Michigan Dept. of Corrections, get the population figures on the prison, reformatory, juvie facilities and try to match that figure.....easy!!!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.