Speaking of Psychology - Understanding Racial Inequities in School Discipline (SOP89)

Episode Date: September 11, 2019

Discipline in pre-K through 12 schools is not doled out equally, as black students, boys and students with disabilities are suspended and expelled at much higher rates than other students, according t...o a report released last year by the Government Accountability Office. These types of harsh discipline can have dire consequences on a child’s future, including putting him or her at a higher risk of falling into the school-to-prison pipeline. Guests Amanda Sullivan, PhD, associate professor of educational psychology at the University of Minnesota, and Ivory Toldson, PhD, professor of counseling psychology at Howard University, are experts on discipline disparities in pre-K to 12 schools. Join us online August 6-8 for APA 2020 Virtual. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:05 Welcome to Speaking of Psychology, a biweekly podcast from the American Psychological Association. I'm your host, Caitlin Luna. Discipline in K-12 schools is not doled out equally, as black students, boys, and students with disabilities are suspended and expelled at much higher rates than other students. That's according to a report released last year by the government accountability office. These types of harsh discipline are even occurring in preschools across America. Any kind of punishment that takes a kid out of the classroom is known as exclusionary discipline, and it can have dire consequences on a child's future, including putting him or her at higher risk of falling into the school-to-prison pipeline. Also, looming around this issue is the fact that the Department of Education rolled-back protections intended to reduce these well-documented disparities in December 2018.
Starting point is 00:00:56 To explain the current state of school discipline and what we can do to help children have a fair shot at an education, Our guests for this episode are Dr. Amanda Sullivan, Associate Professor of Educational Psychology at the University of Minnesota, and Dr. Ivory Toltsin, Professor of Education at Howard University. Both are experts on discipline disparities in pre-K through 12 schools. They presented at a congressional briefing hosted by APA on the topic in June 2019. Welcome, Dr. Sullivan and Dr. Toltsin. Thank you for having us. I'll start with you, Dr. Sullivan, first. You know, I gave a brief explanation of what the term exclusionary discipline means, but it would be helpful for you to expand on that a bit more for our listeners. Yeah, certainly. So common practices include suspension and expulsion, which generally bar students return to school for a specified time period. And this can be anywhere from days to the remainder of a school year. But it also includes things like early dismissals, so sending a child home with their parent off the record or extended timeouts in school suspension. So spending the day or
Starting point is 00:01:56 several days in a room, kind of like what we almost think of as like study hall used to be. But it can also include things like using physical restraint, corporal punishment, and even involving law enforcement. And like you mentioned, taken together, it just shows this common feature of removing students from opportunities to learn. And it's important to be aware that it happens at all age and grade levels. So we see it used throughout elementary, middle, and secondary school, but also early childhood settings. So these practices get applied with preschoolers, toddlers, and even infants to a certain extent. Can you describe situations when this exclusionary discipline is used in schools? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:35 I mean, I think people have a misconception that it's reserved for very severe or dangerous behaviors, but we see it used for everything from tardiness to dress code violations, very kind of ambiguous or subjective offenses like disrespect or talking out of turn. And so it really gets applied across the boards as oftentimes a kind of go-to response to any behavior that's unwanted in the school setting. And these disparities show that this practice is overused in our schools in America today. Yeah, in many school systems, yes. And is it ever an effective way to manage disruptive students? I mean, or some people who might argue for it in certain cases. I think very rarely. I mean, I think the science of psychology has given us a lot of
Starting point is 00:03:18 knowledge about how we respond effectively to both prevent inappropriate behaviors, but to foster positive behaviors. And in general, those are better options than any of these exclusionary discipline practices. I want to turn to that government accountability office report, which found that black students comprised 15% of all public school students. Yet they accounted for 39% of all students suspended from school during the 2013-2014 school year. That was the most recent data GAO had access to while doing its report. Do you believe that some of these, what are some the underlying factors that are causing this? Dr. Tolton. Well, I think the main factor is that not enough people care. These statistics have been out for so long now, decades even. It's consistent
Starting point is 00:04:07 across so many different data sets, so many different reports are finding the exact same thing. And there's just not enough people that care about the problem are who, who are, who, really believe that there are unfair reasons for this happening. There's too many people out there that think that black boys just do more bad things, and that's why they're being suspended more. But beyond that, some of the factors that's shown up in research, there's a cultural mismatch between a lot of black students and the teachers that serve them. And this isn't just based on race.
Starting point is 00:04:51 is also based on socioeconomic status. A lot of children who come from poor communities, they're taught by people who don't understand them very well and who have certain stereotypes about their communities, how they grow up, their families. And these stereotypes manifest themselves in overly punitive disciplinary practices. It also leads to a lot of,
Starting point is 00:05:21 educators believing that the children that they're teaching are threatening. And so whereas a white girl in a suburban school, her attitude may be described as sassy, a black boy in under-resourced school, that same disposition would be considered thuggish or, you know, those types of things. and that makes a difference on how people will view a problem. Another issue is one of the main factors that's associated with suspensions is academic disengagement. So students who seem to care less about their particular school are more likely to be suspended, and you're more likely to care less if you're going to a school where you're passing through mail detectors,
Starting point is 00:06:14 where you have this strict dress code policy, where you're not invited to express yourself as you go through this very important stage in your life. You're also not given a lot of agency into your own affairs, and you're not taught a curriculum that's culturally aligned to you. And so a lot of times these students will not engage as well, which leads to more punitive disciplinary policies.
Starting point is 00:06:48 So those are some of the underlying issues. Last point, black students are more likely to be suspended in predominantly black schools. When they go to integrated schools, they still get suspended proportionally more than the white students at those schools, but they get suspended less often than the black students at predominantly black schools. So this demonstrates that a lot of times it has something to do with the culture of the school. When you have a predominantly black student body, there's a certain attitude and mentality. There's something that the educators are seeing that they should not see that's leading to these harsh policies. You touched on a very important point about implicit bias and just a brief description is that's when we have attitudes toward people or associate stereotypes of them without being
Starting point is 00:07:43 consciously aware of it. So can you elaborate more about how implicit bias factors into some of these disparities? Sure. And implicit biases are biases that's beyond your conscious awareness. They typically manifest themselves in decisions that you make without really thinking about them. And it's important for me to point out that while implicit biases are rampant, and I think that all of us have implicit biases, I think that, the explicit biases, the things that a lot of these educators will actually admit to are actually just as severe or maybe even more. So when we hear educators talk about kids from that community, when they say all of them come from single parent households and that's why they act the way that they act. When they say that, you know, none of these children are reading them on grade levels.
Starting point is 00:08:41 So why would we have science at this school? Or why do we have, why would we even have calculus at this school? These are things I hear all the time. And I think until we deal, you know, I wish we had the luxury to just zero in on implicit biases. But a lot of this stuff is blatant, dare I say it, racism and racial explicit biases. And these explicit biases are, you said they're playing out in schools all across America today. Yeah. Can you elaborate more about why black boys would be more likely to be expelled from all black school or predominantly African American schools?
Starting point is 00:09:19 Yeah. It has to do with the way that people see the school environment. A lot of times when we think about suspensions, we think about it as on an individual level. We don't think of it on a systemic level. And this makes us think that there's certain children that are more likely to be suspended. certain teachers who are more likely to give referrals or send children out of class. But really, it's a larger structure. And that's something that we have to understand.
Starting point is 00:09:51 Typically, when you have a diverse school environment or have, especially an environment that has a lot of affluent children, children with parents with means, the school will accommodate those students in ways that they won't accommodate poor students. and they also perceive their behaviors, or they perceive the overall school environment as an environment that is conducive to learning. A lot of times we have principals that are assigned to predominantly black school
Starting point is 00:10:26 because of people that hired them believe that they're disciplined problems. You rarely see a principal coming to a predominantly white school just because of the, just because of, they are a good disciplinarian. They go there because they know how to make that connection between what they're learning in school and going to college and different things like that. So what we need to assert and demand is that predominantly black schools need the same type of resources, the same mentality, the same care that the predominantly white schools are having. And to assign
Starting point is 00:11:03 a coach to be principal of a predominantly black school because they, tough talk and because they talk about putting students in line, that's, that demonstrates a bias in and of itself and it usually leads to these strict disciplinary policies that we see. Yeah, we also see that behaviors are treated very differently and perceived very differently. I mean, from an early childhood onwards. So we can look at like research that's used eye tracking shows that educators tend to spend more time watching the black students in a classroom. So they're looking for trouble.
Starting point is 00:11:39 And then when something does occur, it's perceived differently, like Dr. Tolson mentioned. And so there's more observation of these students, but then regardless of what they do, again, anything from disobedience or speaking out of turn, that kind of thing, the harsher discipline tends to get applied. So when we look at the research that has looked at like what happens to students when decisions are made, white students tend to be penalized. for much more severe behaviors, whereas students of color are more likely to be penalized for things that are very much judgment calls around what's acceptable. And oftentimes, things that are actually acceptable and adaptive in their communities are the things they're getting punished for in schools. And so I think a lot of things come back to misunderstandings of culture, misunderstandings of child development, behavior, learning, and mental health, that then we're
Starting point is 00:12:31 penalizing kids for the misunderstandings of the adults in the settings. So this is a broader cultural issue in terms of we're saying it's the culture of the school. It's the culture of the people who are at the school. Do you have examples off the top of your head of schools that are doing this well in terms of working to reduce these disparities? Anything come to mind? Well, I think schools where they're actually attending to it, so monitoring their data, not just by race, but gender, disability status, where they are investing. in staff training to develop non-biased attitudes to engage in non-discriminatory practices. We see some really nice successes with investments in positive school climate in developing student engagement in using school-wide positive behavioral interventions
Starting point is 00:13:24 and supports where the focus there is on teaching and reinforcing positive behaviors as opposed to just punishing and in particular sending kids out because of unwanted behaviors. So it all starts with teaching. We don't expect students to magically come to school knowing how to read, so why would we think that they would walk into a classroom
Starting point is 00:13:42 magically knowing how a teacher wants them to behave? And I'll add that it's probably more common than a lot of people think to have a school that have disciplinary policies that are fair. And a lot of times it starts with the principal. Teachers do not have the authority to suspend students. It's the assistant principal typically that makes that decision. But the teachers are the ones sending the students out.
Starting point is 00:14:10 But it's really the principle that sets the tone that the principal comes in day one and says, we're going to keep these students in our class. And these are the resources I'm giving you. This is what we're going to do. It typically happens. And, you know, there are programs out there restorative justice. And I think those programs work very well. But I think it's also a mistake that a lot of people make,
Starting point is 00:14:37 thinking that predominantly black schools need something differently than predominantly white schools. If you look at the way that they typically handle some of the same types of issues at predominantly white schools, if we just look at dress code policies, a lot of suburban predominantly white schools, their dress code policies are very loose, and they would never send us to the style.
Starting point is 00:15:03 a child home over dress coats. But in a lot of the impoverished predominantly black areas, it's common. So just that alone will reduce suspensions. And we could just go down the list. Look at how you, you know, so my method, what I would tell people to do, what would you do if the student was white, honestly? And I think we could fix a lot of things just that way. Yeah, remember there was an issue a couple months ago of a school in Houston, I believe,
Starting point is 00:15:32 where there was a dress code for parents and that created a lot of controversy because parents were, you know, dropping their children off, maybe they'd just gotten up in the morning or something and the issue was that the principal did not want parents to come to school and I guess, you may call pajamas or relaxed clothing, that sort of thing.
Starting point is 00:15:50 So what kind of message would something even like that send? And I'll be remiss if I didn't say that, that was a black principal. It was a predominantly, predominantly students of color, black and Hispanic. And they have a fair number of black teachers and a good number of black people who supported that decision.
Starting point is 00:16:12 And it goes to show that even black people can be biased against other black people, particularly poor people. And I think that this idea that certain children come from certain neighborhoods that have these corrupted cultural values. And somehow they need to be put in line in order for them to achieve.
Starting point is 00:16:40 So, you know, if you're in a predominantly white neighborhood, you know, gentrifying neighborhood and your parents are coming with flip-flops and they didn't dry their hair so as wet hair, that's fine. But if you have a black woman that comes in rollers, somehow they're extending this way beyond just a woman bringing her child to school and wanting her curls to be fresher when she gets to work, then when she drops the kids off. So there's this larger mentality that we have and it's not just racist class that we really need to check. I think it's just an extension of this notion of like respectability politics and schools.
Starting point is 00:17:26 And so it's not just schools trying to control and shape the behaviors of kids, but then we see it extending to the parents as well. I want to turn over to boys because in the report they were particularly overrepresented among students who received corporal punishment, physical punishment, by about 27 percentage points. And when I read the statistic, I was quite surprised because I thought corporal punishment was a thing of the past. So how are schools able to administer physical punishment and in what types of schools is this happening in and where are they around the country? I mean, it's still legal in, I want to say, about 19 or 20 states. So they're not violating any laws if they use corporal punishment. It's allowed, I am fairly certain it's more common in the South, which is true for a lot of the more severe exclusionary discipline practices. We tend to see higher levels in that part of the country.
Starting point is 00:18:18 But in a lot of ways, it's an extension of the same way we see differences regionally and certain groups around, acceptance of corporal punishment at home, that permissiveness extends into the schools again. And so it's not uncommon to see not just acceptance, but preference for that kind of response to misbehaviors in school settings. But again, it's legal in many states today, right now. Yes, I found that to be quite shocking that that was even a thing people were doing in schools. Do you have anything to add, Dr. Toltson? No, and it's not common. It's far more common to bring police officers in the school and arrest students for very innocuous behaviors. And that's much more of an imminent threat to us. But there are these pockets out there. There are, you know, as Dr. Sullivan said, there's probably about 19 states. And they're all listed online. They're pretty easy to find with a Google search. A lot of the states where it's, you know, there's probably about 19 states. And they're all listed online. They're pretty easy to find with a Google search. A lot of the states where, it's legal, they still don't implement it.
Starting point is 00:19:24 And a lot of times you still have to have parents' permission to do it. But as with all of the different types of exclusionary are highly overly punitive policies, we see disproportionality when it comes to black students, in particular black male students. Can you touch on the arrest in school you just mentioned? What are we seeing, you know, bringing police officers to the school to remove students or if there's an in-the-school security officer that, involved with removing a student from the classroom. What kind of rates are we seeing this happening in? Very high. And, you know, these are some of the things that a lot of people probably don't, don't,
Starting point is 00:20:03 weren't aware of. But most school resource officers are academy trained police officers with arresting authority. And they have no further training to, to, to work in schools than anybody out there chasing people who shoplift or who mug somebody. A lot of times these school resource officers are assigned there because there's no other good fit for them. So they're not people who just say, I love children and I want to work around kids. These are people who, for whatever reason, usually pretty nebulous reasons, are assigned to the school.
Starting point is 00:20:46 another thing is that a lot of them are armed. Correctional officers in the prison don't carry guns, and they're not academy trained. They're trained specifically to work with that population. The police officers in school are armed, and they can make arrest. And then you have these laws. You have these school conduct laws, like what happened in South Carolina, where the officer body slammed the young girl. and it was called on camera.
Starting point is 00:21:18 But in South Carolina, there is a law that makes discipline problematic behavior in school. And they actually use the word obnoxiously in the law. So someone who's acting obnoxiously in the school is subject to arrest. So that makes things that you can do outside of school. You know, so the same black girl could go to a store. and catch an attitude with a clerk. And that would not be an arrestable offense, but you do it in school,
Starting point is 00:21:52 and all of a sudden you have an officer body slamming you, are just arresting you. So we've really gotten far away from where we need to go. And the irony is a lot of these laws originate from a lot of mass shootings at school, which are more often, at predominantly white schools, but yet the laws end up morphing and end up disproportionately affecting black students, even though the behaviors of black students wasn't necessarily the original
Starting point is 00:22:30 impedist to the law. So it's a lot of things we need to think about when it comes to the way that we're using school resource officers right now. My personal opinion is that we need to do away with school resource officers altogether. That may be a radical thing for some people to hear, but if you're going to have a school security officer, they need to be trained to work in a school. And across the nation, you have people who have no training to work in schools.
Starting point is 00:22:59 I went to one school, the school resource officers, they had their mellow detector set up. I asked for the principal by name, and the school resource officers did not know the principal's name. Wow. And this was in Brooklyn, New York. And even some of the language use, too, like you described the word obnoxiously. I mean, that leaves a lot to interpretation of what that behavior means.
Starting point is 00:23:21 It's not very specific. So it leaves a lot of room for a student to get removed from the classroom by a resource officer or calling the police. I want to turn out to students with disabilities who are also disproportionately affected, as they represent about 12% of all public school students in account for 25% or more of students referred to law enforcement. that includes being arrested for a school-related incident or suspended from school. So what do you think are some of the underlying causes of disparities for students with disabilities? Well, I think, again, there's these broad misunderstandings of development, behavior, mental health, and also just the nature of disability.
Starting point is 00:23:56 And then when we pair that with insufficient use of effective, what we know are highly effective approaches to behavior management, to classroom instruction, to delivering interventions to support their behavioral, and social emotional development relative to those disabilities, I think it's a recipe for disaster, and that's why we see that students with disabilities across the board, but particularly students
Starting point is 00:24:19 with learning and emotional disabilities, are very likely to be subject to these consequences, even though they're not going to help them improve their behavior, and even though in a lot of ways, much of what happens is counter to the spirit of the law and the legal protections put in place to prevent their exclusion from schools. But this notion of sending kids out is so deep,
Starting point is 00:24:39 deeply ingrained in how we think about responding to unwanted behaviors. Just the way you think about parents when a child does something wrong at home. It's pretty, we think of like the classic, like, go to your room, right? And so it remains the go to for a lot of kids, but even though when we know, when we have kids who are acting out because of their disability, for instance, if we have a child who's dysregulated, who has a severe emotional or behavioral disorder, who has a severe learning disorder that affects their ability to engage with a classroom instruction, Instead of thinking about the ways to tailor what's happening in the classroom, to support their learning, and to support positive behavior, exclusion can be the fallback a lot of the time.
Starting point is 00:25:18 And you're talking more about students that with learning disabilities are emotional difficulties. Do students with disabilities like physical disability or being deaf or blind or something, do they fall into this category? Not the physical disabilities so much, but we also see it with students with developmental disabilities. So we have folks with fairly substantial language impairments, cognitive impairments, who are also treated in a way that's just inappropriate. And this report from the Government Accountability Office found that black students, boys and students at disabilities were disciplined at high rates, no matter what type of school they attended. So that was public schools, magnet schools, charter schools, alternative schools, or special education.
Starting point is 00:25:57 So what does this tell us? I mean, I think it comes back to the insufficiency of the practices used and the insufficiency of the policies and procedures in place. support students. Just because students are going to a charter school, a private school, an alternative school doesn't mean that they're going to be implementing research-based practices, even though we know a lot about how to support behavior and behavior of students with disabilities in particular really well. Yeah. And I think it's also important to, you know, differentiate those categories a bit because black, in proportion to the students who are at that school, black students, black male students consistently are suspended more, but they're not suspended more at, say, a traditional school than an alternative school.
Starting point is 00:26:44 Most alternative schools have very, very high rates of suspension. But it's important to really get into the nuance of it. I remember having a conversation with an assistant principal at a mixed school. and I looked up his school stats and, you know, this is someone who I knew well enough to do that, but I looked up his school stats at the Civil Rights Data Collection and found that his school had disproportionality. And that's right there, you know, why do you think they have this disproportionality? And his explanation was that it was a suburban school that was attracting a lot of people from the city.
Starting point is 00:27:28 It was in suburban Philadelphia. And a lot of parents were taking their students from the Philadelphia schools, sending them to this school, thinking that they would get a better education. And probably in a lot of regards, they are. But his theory, our hypothesis, was that these students were bringing some of the behaviors that they had in their inner city schools to that school, and that school just wasn't tolerating it. So we got into a larger, you know, deeper discussion about, you know, these are students who have been uprooted by their parents, who are in an environment that's much different from the one that they had, who are, you know, maybe was in a predominantly black school.
Starting point is 00:28:16 And all of a sudden, they're a minority in the school. They probably have teachers and other students who are looking at them certain types of way because they're from a different social economic. status. So of course you're going to see some adjustment difficulties and trying to deal with that strictly by suspensions is just not, you know, that's only going to further the rut that they're in. And he seemed to get that. But I think it's important that people know that a lot of these suspensions happen and the people who are doing them, they can offer you some pretty reasonable explanations. And we all have to think a little bit deeper and get a little bit deeper to the issue beyond the surface in order to really come up with long-term solutions.
Starting point is 00:29:04 So a lot of this relates to just making these judgments and bringing, like you said, the explicit and implicit bias in the equation and really examining that. Did the principal have a response to that? Have you brought these important points to his attention? He said that he would try to do something about it. And he said that he would bring some speakers in. and I didn't follow up. This was a very personal conversation,
Starting point is 00:29:33 but he did seem to understand what I was getting at. But, you know, I've never had any principle that had this type of disproportionality that wasn't able to give me a reason. So they all have their own explanations, but when you get deeper into the issue, And if you could just get them to care, if you can get them to see this, you know, this isn't right, you know, and these suspensions are not going to do the work for us, then, you know, they can do something about it. I think a lot of times the blame is placed on the students or their families without acknowledging that administrators, teachers have an important part in playing and the behaviors that occur in school.
Starting point is 00:30:21 So we know enough from behaviorism from learning research about how to cultivate. certain behaviors, positive or negative. And so I think if we can kind of shift the way that school leaders and teachers are envisioning their role in this, and in this particular situation, I think asking why we don't explicitly teach, or at the very least articulate what the behavioral expectations are, and then support the behaviors that we want,
Starting point is 00:30:48 as opposed to just punishing the behaviors that we don't want, especially because we know there's enough research to show that that's not effective in cultivating change in the long run. So sending a kid home doesn't, it does not improve behavior. It's the main go-to in a lot of places, but it doesn't actually change anything. And it seems like you're mentioning a lot of important psychological concepts and psychological research that can be brought into these schools to help deal with this issue of exclusionary discipline in the fallout. Yeah, I mean, if we just trained all administrators and teachers and special educators on effective behavior management, on principles
Starting point is 00:31:21 of learning, principles of behavior, I wonder how much different things would look. Do you have a quick example of that, that you may say you're talking about cultivating positive behaviors. Can you have something you can share? Well, I just think about, so I have a four-year-old, and I engage with her differently, say, than some of her friend's parents do, for instance. And I know, because I'm a psychologist and trained in school psychology in particular, I know that if I spent literally 15 to 30 seconds before we go into a new situation explaining to her what I expect her to do in the next few minutes, like if we're going to go into this setting or just when we get home, I expect you to do X, Y, Z.
Starting point is 00:31:56 that it's more likely to happen than if I just walk in and then get mad when she doesn't do the thing that I told her not to do. That same principle applies whether we're talking about four-year-olds or 14-year-olds or adults. I can do the same thing with family members who are adults or friends, right? If we make explicit what our expectations are, we're more likely to see the behaviors that we want. And that's not, I mean, that's just basic behaviorism. Do you think there is the issue is surrounding support in schools? I know we talked about a lot of these decisions to take students out of the classroom are with administrators. Do teachers who you've spoken with in these areas, do they feel overwhelmed?
Starting point is 00:32:32 Do they feel like they don't know what to do in terms of like they might have a student who's being disrupted for whatever reason? They have 25 other students they need to educate and just not having those tools to address it in a better way? Yeah. And I empathize with those teachers because a lot of these schools that have the highest rates of suspensions, they have. teachers on average that have the lowest number of years in the teaching profession. They have mostly junior level teachers. A lot of them have teachers who are in certain transitions and they for whatever reason take off a lot of time and so they end up teaching with substitutes a lot of times. And a lot of these schools
Starting point is 00:33:14 have very low resources and so you know just the staff to do effective interventions is just not there. And so in a lot of these environments, it is, it becomes, you know, pretty enticing to say, I'm just going to remove a child that's given me problems, just to get through the day. They'll be quite honest. And then you slap on certain mandates that a lot of schools have that teachers have to improve test performance. And so you're getting all this slack about having students to meet certain benchmarks. And yet you have a student in your class that's just not getting it and don't really seem interested and seems to want to do anything except the work. And you know that when they take that test, that one student is going to bring down the entire average of the
Starting point is 00:34:22 the class. It becomes, you know, very, you know, enticing just to say, you know, I want to suspend, I want to counsel the student out of my class because now they're messing up with my future. And all of this, I believe, could be dealt with on the policy level. I think that if we had better policies, and if we were able to distribute the resource to the school more equitably. A lot of times they have lower, lower quality teachers are lesser experienced teachers in these schools because they pay less. And so because of the way the, you know, a lot of the, the schools are funded through property tax, you have some schools in the fluent districts, public schools that can afford to pay their teachers, 10, sometimes $20,000 more than the
Starting point is 00:35:21 teacher that's teaching in, uh, under resource district. Uh, so all of these things come together to create a, uh, a type of perfect storm, uh, for teachers to be more, more punitive. And again, the teachers aren't suspending. They're just sending them out of their classes. But then you have, um, you know, these, you know, principals and administrators, uh, that will conspire with the teachers and go on to have these students out of the class. And teachers aren't prepared necessarily to deal with the diversity of behaviors that students engage in in classrooms. I think teacher prep, if we look at it, it's disproportionately focused on the academic side. Even though we've known from research for longer than I've been alive, that effective behavior management is a gateway to being able to have the time and space to engage in effective instruction.
Starting point is 00:36:13 yet we don't see that understanding necessarily reflected in teacher preparation or the standards and policies that are applied there. And so I would actually be curious to see how many teachers have more than a chapter or part of a day in their teacher preparation programs around behavior management, around disability, any of that. And the research is there. So when we ask teachers about their comfort level in differentiating instruction in managing behaviors effectively, many if not most teachers feel underprepared. And so we see it then in how they respond to student behaviors. And so more so than not, I think a lot of teachers rely on what they see from their supervising teachers or what they experienced in their practica or their student teaching experiences.
Starting point is 00:36:58 And so if they were with a supervising teacher who had really good behavior management skills, who knew how to create a positive climate in their classroom and how to work with a variety of different students, then they can replicate that in their own practice. But if they had a supervising teacher who didn't have those skills, they're going to replicate what they saw. And if they didn't see something that worked out well, we can see that kind of the ramifications for the entirety of their careers, unless there's some intensive, effective professional learning after the fact. But a lot of professional learning that happens is kind of a one-stop kind of like a data dump. So that one-hour, one-day training, even though we know from research the type of training that actually is going to change teacher behavior. and be sustainable, takes coaching and takes kind of that long-term follow-up to really change the behaviors.
Starting point is 00:37:51 But a lot of it's just not happening in-service training or pre-service training, for that matter. And before we get into more of like the what people can take away from this, I want to touch on a statistic I mentioned, the very top when I was introducing you both, is about preschools, which I found to be one of the more shocking statistics when I was researching this topic. So this is also happening in preschools where preschools are getting suspended and the numbers are much higher for black children and boys. APA's Health Disparities Office reported that preschool suspensions and expulsions dwarf those during grades K through 12 by more than three to one. So what's going on? Well, there are some districts that have made the policy to not suspend preschoolers.
Starting point is 00:38:37 And I support that policy. I think that that is one of those things where you should be able to say, you know, just cut and dry, you know, do not suspend them. And if it's a child that has, you know, certain developmental disorders and they need a special type of learning environment, then you can deal with that. But to just suspend preschoolers, I think it's something that needs to be done away with. Now, the reason why, and I think, you know, this is all speculation at this point, but it appear, and I'm going to speak as a preschool parent also. It seems as though standards and the things that we believe certain preschoolers are that preschoolers generally should be able to do by certain ages is out of whack with reality right now. The things that people are saying about what they need to learn, what they need to master before they reach the age of five, it doesn't comport with research. And, you know, the most rapid period of brain development is between the ages of birth and five.
Starting point is 00:39:54 And students are catching on to different things at all different paces, you know, during that period. You know, you can easily have a class where, in preschool, where you have one student that's reading at a third grade level in preschool, and you have someone else that don't know their phonics yet. And quite possibly, by the time they turn seven years old, it's still possible for them to be at the same level, given what we know about brain development. But it doesn't really seem like schools are really get that. And preschoolers, they want to have fun, they want to play, they don't want structure and order.
Starting point is 00:40:43 And I've seen some schools that will try to make their preschoolers line up all the time. And, you know, they're giving preschoolers homework. Like, I've actually seen this. And these are schools that, that, that, try to create this rigorous learning environment, and they're really responding to this hyper-testing that we're doing. And they've really bought them to the philosophy that if you drill things as early as four years old, that you put them in a better position to pass test.
Starting point is 00:41:27 And that's just not the way that preschool... meant to be. I don't think that's a developmentally appropriate way to run a preschool program. But I think that there is a connection between that and the suspensions that we see. I think we just see large-scale misunderstanding of child development. And so, I mean, I think, again, with my own child, like, we just had some kindergarten testing going on. And I didn't realize, but when we showed up, they wanted us literally, they wanted me to just leave her at the door and that she was supposed to be fine with being in a strange situation with adults she'd never seen. And they notated and they told me this that she had difficulty separating.
Starting point is 00:42:08 Whereas what I saw was very typical and it was all of a minute or two of our time, but that it was perceived as being inappropriate when I think if we understand child development and behavioral development and all of that, it wouldn't be unusual, but they've just decided on a fairly arbitrary basis that this is what they expect to see, whether we're talking about cognitively, pre-academics or developmentally. And then when we layer on racial bias and different types of biases on top of that, where there's inappropriate understandings of culpability for behavior or willfulness of behavior, that's when we see students being pushed out via suspension and expulsion,
Starting point is 00:42:47 where instead, if we, again, we just applied what are some really well-known behavioral principles and strategies for responding to behavior or creating the behaviors we want. We wouldn't even have these problems in the first place. But again, I ask how often are those things taught in pre-service and in-service professional development? Yeah. And there's something called a kindergarten readiness assessment. And I've been in two state-level meetings where this kindergarten readiness assessment was leading to all types of consternation. Because they're testing this district and they're finding that, you know, something like,
Starting point is 00:43:28 50% of their students was kindergarten ready. And when I would ask basic questions about, you know, what is the test measuring? How long has the test been out? Is there any district out there where the majority of their students are kindergarten ready? And the last state that I looked at, more white students were kindergarten ready than Asian students. But yet when you looked at their later achievement rates, the Asian students were doing better. So what kind of long-term predictions are we making when the racial results don't even comport with what we see? And it was difficult for them to answer these questions.
Starting point is 00:44:13 But that just goes to show how someone can put a test out there. Use that test to create a problem. And you have policymakers scrambling around trying to figure out why their kindergartners aren't ready. When again, just basic neuroscience tells us that their brains are still developing. And if they're not ready before five years old, that in no way means that they haven't learned what they need to learn during that time. And it's not even really about learning at that point. It's about experiences. You know, it's about, you know, being a child and experimenting with different things.
Starting point is 00:44:56 but I think, you know, things like that. And there's also issues, you know, with a spike in psychotropic medications being prescribed to preschoolers. Somebody told me about that and I didn't even believe it. And off-label use. So it's not even what they're supposed to. It's just like, let's give them this cocktail and see what happens. What kind of drugs are those? Antipsychotics.
Starting point is 00:45:18 Yeah, I think antipsychotics is the most common one. Stimulants. Yeah. Yeah. So you want to, so a four-year-old who can't sit still in school, which is oftentimes very developmentally appropriate. But it's perceived as a problem because there's this standard that people forget that they just made those up, right? And oftentimes they're completely divorced from the research and all the theory around, again, human development. And then when kids can't follow the standards, it's quick to give a pill versus to teach the adults, whether we're talking. talking about parents, teachers, administrators, how to support positive behavior. And so it happens a lot
Starting point is 00:46:00 and who does it happen to more, kids with disabilities, kids from low income backgrounds, because it's cheaper on the health services side of things to prescribe than to engage in family therapy or to send out a behavioral specialist to help build the parents' competency to deal with behavior. we see like really high rates of this off-label prescription with kids in foster care, for instance, who, again, their behaviors, if we think again from what we know in psychology and what we know about principles of behavior, a lot of what we see is very expected, given the unpredictability of their settings or the trauma they've experienced. But instead of applying the psychological treatments we know are effective, the quickest way to do it is to give them this kind of prescription cocktail
Starting point is 00:46:47 that then is going to have a whole host of science. side effects and unwanted side effects, but it's much more common than it should be. And what are the consequences of this exclusionary discipline in terms of academic achievement and future success? Well, there's, as far as I know, there's no research to support its use in terms of reducing the likelihood of whatever the behavior was that it was applied for or in producing desired behaviors. But we do have a lot of research to show that it can undermine students' academic achievement, students who are suspended and expelled are more likely to be retained, to drop out
Starting point is 00:47:25 of school, to be involved in criminal justice. So we have a lot of research to suggest the negative effects that it has and very little to indicate any positive effects. There's research that also shows that it disconnects them from their school and that other teachers tend to treat them bad, even if the problem. wasn't in their class. So there's a ripple effect for them. When they come back from suspension, they're already behind in their classes, but they also have the stigma of being suspended, which is also problematic. It's this interesting dynamic that we put some, we put a lot of emphasis in promoting attendance and in fighting truancy because we know that keeping kids in school and
Starting point is 00:48:12 really strong attendance is important. And yet then when students are suspended, expelled, even in school suspension where they're missing that instruction. It accumulates or it amounts to a lot of misinstruction over time. And so then it's not really surprising then if people are failing classes being held back, not wanting to be at school because they're missing out. It may just be a few hours or a few days here and there, but it's not as if there are opportunities built in to make up that time. So they're just losing it and the kids who get exposed to it more and more then are disengaging and are more likely to leave school entirely. And again, it's a fair predictable consequence of an inappropriate practice.
Starting point is 00:48:51 How does this all relate to the school to prison pipeline? Are students who are suspended or expelled or expelled more likely to end up in the criminal justice system? Yes. And there's plenty of research to support that, especially when schools are using law enforcement, referring to law enforcement, particularly for those non-dangerous offenses. So what is the status of mental health services offered in K-12 schools? I mean, we've talked a lot about teacher training.
Starting point is 00:49:18 that can help, but in terms of what is being offered to help students who have mental health challenges that they're facing? Well, there's a survey called Health Behaviors on School Age Children, and they surveyed various schools about the services that's available. And one of the things you see in that survey is that when it comes to, if someone were asked, do you have mental health services at the school? is nearly a 100% response rate of affirmative. But then when you get into specific things like family,
Starting point is 00:49:56 especially drugs, you know, there's very few schools that have anything related to drug use, you know, to deal with that. And, you know, there's students who, I've heard of one student who got a 10-day suspension because they smoke the cigarette. But yet there's nobody there that, really talk to them about, you know, putting chemicals in your body at a younger age.
Starting point is 00:50:22 So I think that's the state of it. There's schools that believe they have mental health. But when you really open up the hood, they have it a name only. And so in order for us to really get them the services that they need, there needs to be a look at what people think they have in terms of mental health. and really get into these specific issues that certain students might be dealing with and make sure that they can name all of those issues and services that are available for students to work on.
Starting point is 00:51:00 Yeah, many schools are under-resourced on this. And so, for instance, the ACLU recently did an analysis of data submitted to the Office of Civil Rights under the Department of Education, and they identified some pretty substantial lack of, of school psychologist services, school counselor services, social worker services, so schools where none was reported. But then we also see even where schools say they have mental health services,
Starting point is 00:51:25 oftentimes it can be an itinerant psychologist who's serving multiple school buildings so that they might be in a building for half a day a week or one day a week. And the bandwidth for somebody like that is really limited. We also see many, many settings are far beyond the recommended ratio of student to provider when we look across different mental health providers.
Starting point is 00:51:47 And so they may be there, but if you have one person in a half a day a week that's supposed to serve thousands of kids and families, that's just an impossible situation they've been put in. And so then it's no surprise that they can't leverage the expertise they bring to affect positive outcomes. And so I think not just making sure that they're there at all, but thinking about ratios, thinking about the composition of those mental health support. So it's not enough to just have a,
Starting point is 00:52:15 with an external provider for four hours a week services, which is another fairly common arrangement that we see. But we have to invest in having people who are actually there to serve the families and then can do so in a reasonable manner. I want to turn now to some of those policy issues. We've been touching on a little bit throughout the show. In December 2018, the Federal Commission on School Safety recommended rescinding Obama-era guidance intended to reduce discrimination in school discipline. The Department of Education promptly implemented this recommendation. So what will be the impact of this action? I'm not sure. The guidance documents, I think, was an important tool for people who wanted to do something
Starting point is 00:52:59 about it. But people who were not interested in changing what they were doing, the guidance document didn't necessarily mandate them to do anything. It did point to the laws of the particular state and it was able to show certain people that what they were doing was outside of the outside of the legal boundaries in their state, but the state still have those laws. And so what a person was doing under the the guidance documents, they still should be doing because that's the laws of their state. So I think that while the guidance documents was important information, it helped people who wanted to do something more and people who didn't care about doing anything, I think they
Starting point is 00:54:03 continue to do what they were doing. So there's nothing firm putting it in place saying that you must do this, which is guidelines for schools too? Yeah. Now, on the contrary, something else that happened during Obama years is there was a lot more federal enforcement of where the exclusionary practices was such that the lawyers within the Office of Civil Rights was able to actually bring. a case against those. And so you saw more of that happening during the Obama years.
Starting point is 00:54:44 But still those, the scope of them, you know, the number of districts that were being targeted by the Obama administration, you know, where they, that was acting in the enforcement was still too small to actually put a dent in the larger problem. Yeah. I mean, I think those changes in how investigations happen are going to be really important because previously a complaint by a single family about a single student would trigger investigation for the entire setting or system. And now what we're going to see is it's going to stop at that student. And so in a lot of those instances, when these investigations happened, when they actually went into the records and looked at, so it's not uncommon, for instance,
Starting point is 00:55:27 to find that on paper, schools have appropriate policies in place. But then when they look at implementation of those policies, they could find different implementation depending on who the student was. And so I just did an analysis with a student who also was a lawyer. And we actually looked at for special education disproportionality, what happened in those investigations of what came out of them. And so again, it's not uncommon for these facially neutral, non-discriminatory policies to be in place.
Starting point is 00:55:57 But then what happens in the classroom, what happens in the principal's office or the assistant principal's office was different if it was a black student. or an English language learner than if it was a white student or a white girl in particular. And so that became an really important lever for requiring, oftentimes the investigations resulted in memoranda that required ongoing training and monitoring of what was going on, explicit policies, evaluation to not just check and make sure that policies and procedures were appropriately formulated, but also that they were being implemented fairly and so that all kids were being treated, equally. And we're not going to see that happening anymore because the Department of Ed
Starting point is 00:56:39 under Bretzi DeVos has said that those kind of systemic investigations aren't necessary. And so I think that was really important for families and communities to have that card to play, so to speak. And now that's going away. And so if it's not in the students file, they're not going to, that individual students file absent, say, a whole group of families banding together to file the complaint, we're just not going to see. those types of investigations or resolutions coming out of them anymore. What recommendations do you both have for federal policymakers to address exclusionary discipline?
Starting point is 00:57:15 I mean, I think investing first and foremost in capacity building from investment, so sustained investment in pre-service and in-service training, graduate training for mental health providers because most of them have to have, most school-based providers have to have either a master's degree or doctoral degree to qualify for state certificates to be like a school psychologist or a school counselor. And we know from surveys of graduates that many times they're carrying six-figure debt. And there's programs that exist, particularly within different dimensions of federal policy. For instance, like IDEA Part D supports graduate preparation for related service providers for kids with disabilities.
Starting point is 00:57:56 And so maintaining those kind of investments become really important. and just investing in things that work. So investing in programs that will support positive mental health outcomes, positive behavioral outcomes, research-based social-emotional supports. So a few things before we wrap up. What can parents do with the information we've talked about today? I admittedly have difficulty responding to what can parents do because sometimes I believe that I'm mostly talking to parents with social capital.
Starting point is 00:58:29 when I respond to questions like this. And I think, you know, most parents, they want what's in the best interest of their children. But the way that the system is set up now, a parent who is college educated, a parent who has certain resources, a parent who knows how to express themselves in a way that we learn to express ourselves when we go through formal education, they have the edge and that's the reality. So the parents who have that social capital, what I would implore us to do is to look out for parents who don't. Parents who are working a wage job,
Starting point is 00:59:15 parents who take public transportation to get their child to school, and who may more often be late because of unreliable public transportation, who have to actually. lose money if they were to take off work to go to a PTA meeting or to go to a parent teacher conference. So we need to look out for those parents. And I think that, you know, the people who are working in this space, the advocates and the researchers like us, we need to do a better job of joining forces with other parents and speaking for them and so. schools need to do a better job of reaching parents that are not college educated and that are
Starting point is 01:00:05 working class. So I know that doesn't necessarily answer the question of what parents should do, but I'm thinking more about the mentality that we should have as parents when we try to work together to resolve this issue. I think knowing their rights can be really important. And that's hard to do because even as I interact with my daughter's school, I realize how knowing what I know, it's still incredibly cumbersome and things are so complicated. But I think to the extent that parents can find and access those resources that have been developed for them through a variety of different technical assistance mechanisms that are out there. So for parents with disabilities in particular, there's a whole host of federally funded centers that have developed guidance,
Starting point is 01:00:52 materials specifically for families, but also for teachers in school districts. There are equity assistance centers, and I'm affiliated for the one in my region, that they're primarily there as a proactive resource for schools that are going to get themselves as a way to avoid investigations with the Office of Civil Rights, but a lot of them also develop information for families about what their rights are. Westlaw is a nice resource for families, but I think just frankly, you can Google a lot of this stuff. Like, what should I do if my student is expelled? What are my rights if my student is suspended? Because a lot of it's about knowing the right questions to ask. And even then, they can still encounter a lot of difficulty,
Starting point is 01:01:33 but the first step is just knowing how to advocate effectively. And luckily, there's a variety of information online to help with that. And what about individual school districts and teachers? Is there are other things they can take away from what we've talked about today and see if they can improve these disparities in them in their schools? Yeah, teachers need to communicate with their students and their families a lot more. A lot of times the problematic behavior that they are confronted with, they'd understand it better if they just talk to them and they would contextualize it better. I remember asking a group of teachers, I said, how do you feel about students who doze
Starting point is 01:02:16 off in your class. And all of them, you know, they didn't like it. They thought it was disrespectful and they used that terminology. I said, well, what if you talk to the student and you found out that they were dozing off because they, their parent had a significant other in the house, had a boyfriend or girlfriend in the house that they were afraid of and they saw them looking at them a certain way and they were afraid that that person was going to sneak into their bed. How did you feel about them dozing off? And then they all immediately became very sympathetic. But the reality is that a lot of times when you see things like dozing off are even, you know, disrespect, oppositional behavior, a lot of times it comes from a place that we might understand
Starting point is 01:03:07 if we just got the details. But you have to care enough to get those details. So I would say opened up the communication and, you know, just, just understand. Teachers can also, you know, take their professional development very seriously and understand that, you know, I know that they have options on what they could, you know, do in their PD. You know, they can, you know, learn about this new way to teach math, or they could learn about how to develop empathy, our cultural competence and things like that. But, you know, they've, in their schooling, they've learned about, you know, all the things that they need to learn about. But professional development is the one opportunity they really have to really get into these issues. And, you know, I'll talk about
Starting point is 01:03:58 my own frustration as someone who does professional development is going into a district where I know that the teaching force is only about 20 percent. people of color, but yet in the 200 people who signed up from my workshop, it's about 70% people of color. And that happens a lot. So a lot of times the people that really need this information the most are not the people that's getting it. And even the white teachers who will be in the professional development, just the questions that they ask, a lot of times I can tell that they have learned, And they at least have a base knowledge of this. But there are too many educators out there who don't really see this as their issue.
Starting point is 01:04:46 And so they need to take that more seriously. Yeah, I think to the extent people can invest that time and energy into unlearning biases and learning cultural responsive, non-discriminatory practices. Also investing time in developing behavior management skills. So this might be through individual or classroom level positive behavior interventions of supports are ideally a school-wide, a PBIS system. There are also a variety of strategies and programs available to support positive student-teacher relationships, which again, the research shows that can reduce some of these behavioral
Starting point is 01:05:20 challenges, also either at the classroom level or the school-wide level investing in ways to improve school climate. So again, there's programs strategies that are there. They don't have to constantly be reinventing the wheel, but rather taking advantage of the knowledge and resources that are already out there. Is there anything a general listener can do, can take action on? Yeah, I mean, different people are at different places in this issue. You know, some of the listeners, they may have their own children in schools that have these issues.
Starting point is 01:05:52 So there are certain things that they could do. But, you know, just a general public, we can use more people speaking out against certain things. And, you know, there's a lot of times I'll see articles about, you know, suspensions are, you know, things that happen, you know, like in, like what happened in, in Montgomery County schools recently where someone, a student had to talk to police officers because he bought toy money to school and somebody said that it might be counterfeit. But a lot of times on these message boards, you'll see people who have just really baked into this idea of, well, you know, students are out of control. We need to get them.
Starting point is 01:06:36 in line and all this kind of stuff. And a lot of, you know, there's this saying, you know, the empty wagons are usually the loudest, or empty wagons are the loudest, or shallow creeks are the most noisy. And a lot of times with the general public, I see people who talk the most, have the most ignorant things to say about the topic. So I know that people who listen to this podcast are very smart. They are not the empty wagons or shallow creek, but people who, really can get into this issue.
Starting point is 01:07:08 So we need them on message boards and we need them talking out when they have an opportunity. We need them to be the counterbalance to this issue so that more people are aware. This is one of those examples where that notion of giving psychology away,
Starting point is 01:07:25 I think psychology has a lot to bring to bear about how we can do this better so that we see better outcomes with students and so to the extent that everybody's, feels empowered to speak up. So it's not just those empty ways. wagons dominating the conversations, but just reminding people that, again, we know how to respond to this well, right? So let's do that. And we're probably going to have to advocate for it a lot
Starting point is 01:07:48 and repeatedly. But I think there's a lot of potential for change. Because again, I mean, nobody, I suspect nobody goes into teaching or working in schools because they hate children, right? I hope people who are there are there if their belief in fostering the development of future generations as part of it. And so if we can link it back to that kind of fundamental ideal, hopefully we can affect change, but also just kind of give away psychology, because we know so much that can help to improve this. So let's help that to happen. Thank you so much for joining us, Dr. Sullivan and Dr. Toltsin. Obviously a lot of work to do in this area, but you left us on a hopeful note. So that can be done in psychology and psychologists can do a lot to address this issue.
Starting point is 01:08:31 Thank you so much for your time. Thank you. Before we go, just a reminder that you can email us your comments and ideas to Speaking of Psychology at APA.org. Also, please consider giving us a rating in iTunes. We'd really appreciate it. Speaking of Psychology is part of the APA podcast network, which includes other great podcasts like APA journals dialogue about new psychological research and progress notes about the practice of psychology.
Starting point is 01:08:55 You can find all of our podcasts on iTunes Stitcher or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also visit our website, speakingof psychology.org to listen to more episodes. I'm Caitlin Luna with the American Psychological Association.

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