scholarly journals Correction to: Associations Between Child and Administrator Race and Suspension and Expulsion Rates in Community Childcare Programs

Author(s):  
Keri Giordano ◽  
Victoria L. Interra ◽  
Giuliana C. Stillo ◽  
Angel T. Mims ◽  
Jennifer Block-Lerner
Author(s):  
Keri Giordano ◽  
Victoria L. Interra ◽  
Giuliana C. Stillo ◽  
Angel T. Mims ◽  
Jennifer Block-Lerner

2002 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 408-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Etscheidt

The author examines the controversy surrounding the discipline provisions of the 1997 Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and suggests that the provisions may serve to encourage systemic reform capable of dramatically impacting the educational and postschool careers of students with emotional or behavioral disorders. The IDEA discipline provisions may assist in curbing traditional exclusionary practices and in developing alternatives to suspension and expulsion. Thus, they may fortify a pedagogically sound and efficacious approach to addressing problem behavior, enhance teacher effectiveness, and improve the schools’ accountability for all students. Such reform is capable of reconciling the competing goals of educational equity and excellence.


2022 ◽  
pp. 002242782110705
Author(s):  
Kelly Welch ◽  
Peter S. Lehmann ◽  
Cecilia Chouhy ◽  
Ted Chiricos

Using the cumulative disadvantage theoretical framework, the current study explores whether school suspension and expulsion provide an indirect path through which race and ethnicity affect the likelihood of experiencing arrest, any incarceration, and long-term incarceration in adulthood. To address these issues, we use data from Waves I, II, and IV of the Add Health survey (N = 14,484), and we employ generalized multilevel structural equation models and parametric regression methods using counterfactual definitions to estimate direct and indirect pathways. We observe that Black (but not Latinx) individuals are consistently more likely than White persons to experience exclusionary school discipline and criminal justice involvement. However, we find a path through which race and Latinx ethnicity indirectly affect the odds of adulthood arrest and incarceration through school discipline. Disparate exposure to school suspension and expulsion experienced by minority youth contributes to racial and ethnic inequalities in justice system involvement. By examining indirect paths to multiple criminal justice consequences along a continuum of punitiveness, this study shows how discipline amplifies cumulative disadvantage during adulthood for Black and, to a lesser extent, Latinx individuals who are disproportionately funneled through the “school-to-prison pipeline.”


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