When students are tracked from their schools into the juvenile and adult criminal justice system, primarily because of zero-tolerance policies, they fall victim to a practice that is now widely known as the school-to-prison pipeline. President Obama urged educators to abandon severe disciplinary policies that criminalize students for offenses that could be handled without law enforcement (Du, 2015). A review of the literature indicates a disproportionate number of Black students are at a greater risk of being adversely impacted by such policies thus increasing their chances of having a negative educational experience. Research shows that Black students receive higher rates of suspension, harsher discipline, and more special education referr...
Nationally, Black girls experience disproportionate discipline consequences more than any other grou...
T he value of education for youth in the K–12 system is generally undisputed. We recognize education...
Public schools in the U.S. continue to define and manage student discipline through a paradigm of cr...
When students are tracked from their schools into the juvenile and adult criminal justice system, pr...
Although zero-tolerance policies were created to foster safe school environments for student engagem...
The purpose of this multicase study was to understand school resource officers’ (SROs’) perceptions ...
abstract: The Zero Tolerance Policy began appearing in secondary schools in the early 1990's. In the...
Research on the nexus between schools and prisons, which overwhelmingly impacts students of color, h...
Since the 1980’s, the current narrative for disparate outcomes faced by minorities in America’s publ...
Teaching and Learning Department Capstone projectZero tolerance policies that mandate expulsion for ...
Education has been a key factor in determining success and societal status in America since its ince...
African American males are populating the American prison system at an alarming rate. A study of zer...
Dr. Diane Kern, Associate Professor, Education, and URI and Rhode Island School Activists. Alarmed b...
This article is timely; it reports on a field-based research project and makes a critical contributi...
Although school crime and violence have declined during the past 5 years, problems still exist. Cons...
Nationally, Black girls experience disproportionate discipline consequences more than any other grou...
T he value of education for youth in the K–12 system is generally undisputed. We recognize education...
Public schools in the U.S. continue to define and manage student discipline through a paradigm of cr...
When students are tracked from their schools into the juvenile and adult criminal justice system, pr...
Although zero-tolerance policies were created to foster safe school environments for student engagem...
The purpose of this multicase study was to understand school resource officers’ (SROs’) perceptions ...
abstract: The Zero Tolerance Policy began appearing in secondary schools in the early 1990's. In the...
Research on the nexus between schools and prisons, which overwhelmingly impacts students of color, h...
Since the 1980’s, the current narrative for disparate outcomes faced by minorities in America’s publ...
Teaching and Learning Department Capstone projectZero tolerance policies that mandate expulsion for ...
Education has been a key factor in determining success and societal status in America since its ince...
African American males are populating the American prison system at an alarming rate. A study of zer...
Dr. Diane Kern, Associate Professor, Education, and URI and Rhode Island School Activists. Alarmed b...
This article is timely; it reports on a field-based research project and makes a critical contributi...
Although school crime and violence have declined during the past 5 years, problems still exist. Cons...
Nationally, Black girls experience disproportionate discipline consequences more than any other grou...
T he value of education for youth in the K–12 system is generally undisputed. We recognize education...
Public schools in the U.S. continue to define and manage student discipline through a paradigm of cr...