“When kids misbehave, it’s a sign they’re not engaged, that they’re struggling. But these students are written off as incapable of learning, or ‘bad,’” Losen says. Urban schools often don’t have the resources, or have not made it a priority, to get to the bottom of why kids aren’t learning, he says. “The easiest path is suspension, so schools don’t have to provide services.”
Losen uses the power of data—including rates of suspension, dropout, graduation, arrest, and other indicators—to raise awareness of the consequences of harsh disciplinary measures. To make the data available to more school districts, the Center for Civil Rights Remedies launched a new web tool that sorts U.S. Department of Education data on suspension by race, ethnicity, gender, English learner, and disability status across nation’s districts.
Policymakers are starting to pay attention. Michael Thompson, director of the Council of State Governments Justice Center, was quoted in a news report as saying, “Everybody recognizes that if we want to find ways to close the achievement gap, we really need to look at the huge number of kids being removed from school campuses who are not receiving any classroom time.”
Slowly, through Losen’s work and that of other reformers, school districts are beginning to modify or drop punitive policies and are considering increased behavioral support for students and training for teachers. These districts include Los Angeles, Baltimore, Chicago, and Denver. Schools that have ended zero-tolerance policies have already seen significant drops in suspensions.
More districts are exploring alternative practices for disciplining students. Among the promising alternatives is “restorative justice,” which seeks to understand the underlying factors causing the misbehavior. Restorative justice provides a safe space for those in the school community to have a say in resolving the conflict and determining the appropriate consequences. Instead of being suspended, a student might be asked to write an apology or perform community service or attend an intervention program.
While suspension often results in a negative impact to the community—unsupervised students getting into trouble and being arrested—restorative justice strengthens community. “It aims to make the community whole,” Losen says. “It calls on the community to understand and embrace the person, instead of shunning him. It says: ‘We care about you, but we’re also holding you accountable.’”
Losen points out that discipline starts in the classroom. From his experience as a teacher, “If things aren’t going well, it’s vital to look at what you’re doing that might be contributing to the situation,” he says. His training helped identify what he could do to manage his classroom more effectively. “I learned that you need clear expectations of behavior, you need to catch kids doing things right, and you need to invest in your relationship with the kids and their parents.”
His research shows that improving relationships with students pays off in dramatically reduced discipline referrals, and ultimately, in the number of suspensions. “When we take a more compassionate approach to disciplining students, while still holding them accountable, we’ll begin to see changes to the tremendous inequities in our educational system.”