Background: Alternative school settings for students who are identified as “disruptive or dangerous” are playing an increasingly prominent role in the world of public education, yet significant gaps in our understanding of their efficacy remain. Objective: This longitudinal investigation within a large school district serving 100,000 students examines multiple factors to determine how the risk of placement in the disciplinary alternative schools is systematically related to predictors and the risk of juvenile subsequent juvenile detention between 3rd and 12th grade. Methods: Four groups of discrete-time hazard models were run separately to determine the most significant predictors in each variable category (i.e., student demographics, behav...
Examines the rise in school suspensions; their effectiveness; the widening racial/ethnic discipline ...
Districts have been engaged in efforts to reduce “differential processing” of discipline-referred st...
The study was designed to describe an urban district\u27s alternative high school population in term...
Alternative school settings for students who are identified as “disruptive or dangerous” are playing...
Background: Alternative school settings for students who are identified as “disruptive or dangerous”...
Georgia’s 2019 K-12 Disciplinary Dashboard shows that 9th grade African American male students have ...
Research on the nexus between schools and prisons, which overwhelmingly impacts students of color, h...
Prior studies establish that Black males follow a disproportionate trajectory from school to prison ...
Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, I examine the prevalence and intensi...
Over the past decade, there has been increasing national, state, and local attention focused on the ...
Schools recruit exclusionary discipline—such as suspensions and expulsions—to deter students from mi...
Nationally, African American students are over-represented in discipline referrals and suspensions r...
Adolescents with juvenile justice system experience may be enrolled into alternative schools to incr...
Given the recent research showing that being suspended even once in ninth grade is associated with a...
This research analyzes the assignment of school suspensions to two subgroups of students attending j...
Examines the rise in school suspensions; their effectiveness; the widening racial/ethnic discipline ...
Districts have been engaged in efforts to reduce “differential processing” of discipline-referred st...
The study was designed to describe an urban district\u27s alternative high school population in term...
Alternative school settings for students who are identified as “disruptive or dangerous” are playing...
Background: Alternative school settings for students who are identified as “disruptive or dangerous”...
Georgia’s 2019 K-12 Disciplinary Dashboard shows that 9th grade African American male students have ...
Research on the nexus between schools and prisons, which overwhelmingly impacts students of color, h...
Prior studies establish that Black males follow a disproportionate trajectory from school to prison ...
Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, I examine the prevalence and intensi...
Over the past decade, there has been increasing national, state, and local attention focused on the ...
Schools recruit exclusionary discipline—such as suspensions and expulsions—to deter students from mi...
Nationally, African American students are over-represented in discipline referrals and suspensions r...
Adolescents with juvenile justice system experience may be enrolled into alternative schools to incr...
Given the recent research showing that being suspended even once in ninth grade is associated with a...
This research analyzes the assignment of school suspensions to two subgroups of students attending j...
Examines the rise in school suspensions; their effectiveness; the widening racial/ethnic discipline ...
Districts have been engaged in efforts to reduce “differential processing” of discipline-referred st...
The study was designed to describe an urban district\u27s alternative high school population in term...