New Study Shows Black Students Receive Harsher Discipline; Does Not Investigate if Fire Is Hot or Water Is Wet

A new study in the budding academic field of spending valuable research dollars to prove stuff we already know has exposed the little-known fact that racism exists in the education sector. Suggested Reading Three Friends Were Headed To A Beyoncรฉ Concert, But One Dies On the Way. Guess What The Other Two Did Next? Our…

A new study in the budding academic field of spending valuable research dollars to prove stuff we already know has exposed the little-known fact that racism exists in the education sector.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

Tulane Universityโ€™s Education Research Alliance for New Orleans released a policy brief examining discipline records from Louisianaโ€™s Department of Education and found startling disparities in the way black students were treated when compared with white children.

โ€œStartlingโ€ must mean โ€œnot surprising at allโ€ because CNN always talks about โ€œstartling new revelations in the Donald Trump investigation,โ€ and it always turns out to be something about a campaign official meeting with Russians or someone in his administration having ties to white supremacists. Iโ€™m pretty sure thatโ€™s the correct definition of โ€œstartling.โ€

Anyway, Tulane found that Louisianaโ€™s black students were about 1.75 times as likely to be suspended from school as the stateโ€™s white students, whether the infraction for which they were disciplined was violent or nonviolent.

https://twitter.com/ERA_NOLA/status/933048655719825409?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Youโ€™re probably thinking: โ€œWell, the black kids probably act out more or commit worse violations.โ€

First of all, youโ€™re racist.

Second, according to the study, โ€œthis disparity is evident even after accounting for studentsโ€™ prior discipline records, background characteristics, and school attended.โ€ It was true when they examined incidents in different school districts. The inequality appeared when they looked at records within certain school districts. It didnโ€™t matter whether the students were in low-income or high-income areas; the results were the same: Black students were routinely punished more often.

Not only did the black pupils receive harsher penalties, but they also received longer suspensions. The study examined fights between one black and one white student and discovered that black students received longer suspensions than their white counterparts.

โ€œBy looking at interracial fights and controlling for studentsโ€™ other background characteristics, we tried to isolate cases in which it would be hard to attribute gaps to explanations other than discriminatory practices,โ€ said study co-author Jon Valant of the Brookings Institution. โ€œWe see small but statistically significant gaps in how black and white students are punished.โ€

The data revealed that black students received 0.4 more days of suspension than their white peers for the same infractions. The disparity begins in kindergarten and lasts through every phase of public education, according to the researchers.

https://twitter.com/ERA_NOLA/status/933365234949083138?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

The research highlights the problem of the โ€œschool-to-prison pipeline,โ€ proving that the problems of racial inequality in the criminal-justice system begin in the educational system. While the study was limited to Louisiana schools, the U.S. Department of Education reports that 18 percent of black boys and 10 percent of black girls received an out-of-school suspension in 2013-2014, compared with only 5 percent of white boys and 2 percent of white girls. Some would say thatโ€™s the definition of โ€œwhite privilege.โ€

I think itโ€™s just startling.

Read the full report here (pdf).

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