For Black Students, Unfairly Harsh Discipline Can Lead to Lower Grades

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Black students are often subject to harsher discipline at school than white students, and those punishments can damage students’ perceptions of their school and negatively impact their academic success years later, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.

In the study, published in the journal American Psychologist, researchers analyzed three years of school records, including disciplinary data and grade point averages, for 2,381 sixth-, eighth- and tenth-grade students from 12 schools in an urban Mid-Atlantic school district in the United States. Of the students, 818 were Black and 1,563 were white. The researchers also surveyed the students each year about their perceptions of their school’s climate – such as whether they felt they belonged at the school and whether they felt that school rules were consistent and clear.

Overall, the researchers found that 26% of the Black students received at least one suspension for a minor infraction over the course of the three years, compared with just 2% of white students. Minor infractions included things such as dress code violations, inappropriate language or using a cell phone in class.

The researchers also found that among Black students, those who were suspended for a minor infraction during the first year of the study had significantly lower grades both one and two years later than students who weren’t suspended. They also found that the relationship between suspensions and grades was mediated by the students’ perceptions of their school climate — in other words, teens who received minor infraction suspensions were more likely to report an unfavorable school climate one year later, which in turn predicted lower grades one year after that.

“Unfortunately, we were not surprised by the findings, considering what we know about the role of racial bias in painting school adults’ views of African American youth as less innocent, older and more aggressive than their white peers. Regardless of the behavior that African American youth engage in, that behavior is viewed by educators as more worthy of harsh school discipline like a suspension,” said study co-author Ming-te Wang, PhD, professor of psychology at the University of Pittsburgh.

The researchers also looked at whether students’ grades and their perceptions of school climate during the first year of the study predicted whether they would receive any suspensions by year three and found no relationship in that direction. This suggests that it was indeed racial bias, and not any individual traits of the student – such as poor self-control – that led to both increased suspensions and poor grades, according to Wang.

The researchers were not able to similarly explore the link between minor infraction suspensions and grades among white students because too few white students received minor infraction suspensions to run an analysis that would reach statistical significance.

The findings illustrate the pervasive negative effects that racial biases in school discipline may have on black students, according to study co-author Juan Del Toro, PhD, a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Pittsburgh. “When students are suspended for a harmless minor infraction, they may understandably begin to view school adults and the rules they enforce as controlling and unfair,” he said. “That can damage adolescents’ relationships with educators and lower their sense of belonging in school.”

The results suggest that schools may need to reconsider policies that allow educators to choose severe punishments such as suspension instead when students commit minor infractions. “Based on our study, it may be important to limit school adults’ opportunities for choosing severe discipline options for minor infractions, because of what we know about the role of racial biases in school discipline,” Del Toro said.

In future studies, the researchers plan to explore where in the school discipline pipeline these racial biases are most likely to play out – for example, whether teachers make harsher discipline suggestions for Black students, or whether school administrators are likely to mete out harsher-then-suggested punishments for Black students. They are also studying whether teachers and schools that promote culturally responsive education, diversity and cultural competence have less racial disparity in school discipline.

Story Credit: American Psychological Association (APA)/Newswise

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