Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Learning While Black [Kid starts a fight at school. Kid's dad, angry his son got punished, sues.]
http://www.time.com/time/education/article/0,8599,238611,00.html ^ | June 5, 2002 | Jodie Morse

Posted on 06/14/2002 11:58:16 PM PDT by summer


"The 16-year-old high school junior [with his father, above]
from Salida, Calif., is a C student with a filthy mouth who has been known to
saunter into class on his own schedule. And, yes, as Russell readily admits, after a
bout of name-calling with a white classmate last fall, he threw the first punch in a
fistfight that left him battered and his adversary with five stitches over his left eye.

But is Russell actually a victim?…."



Learning While Black

You've heard of racial profiling on the roads and in the skies. But are minority kids also being unfairly singled out for discipline in schools?


BY JODIE MORSE

No one is saying Kenneth Russell is an angel.

The 16-year-old high school junior from Salida, Calif., is a C student with a filthy mouth who has been known to saunter into class on his own schedule. And, yes, as Russell readily admits, after a bout of name-calling with a white classmate last fall, he threw the first punch in a fistfight that left him battered and his adversary with five stitches over his left eye.

But is Russell actually a victim? The N.A.A.C.P. and some of his teachers think so. His father John has filed a civil rights complaint with the U.S. Department of Education, charging that Kenneth was unjustly punished for the fight. Although officials from the local Modesto school district ruled the scuffle "mutual," the white classmate received a three-day suspension while Russell was sent home for a little more than a month and later expelled from his school and assigned to one farther from where he lives. "It's been hard catching up with my work," says Kenneth. "I lost out on a month of my high school life."

For years black parents have quietly seethed about stories like Russell's. Now civil rights groups have given those silent suspicions a recognizable name: racial profiling. They contend that not unlike police who stop people on the basis of race, teachers and school officials discipline black students more often - and more harshly - than whites. The result: black students are more likely to slip behind in their studies and abandon school altogether - if they're not kicked out first. In Modesto, black students are 21/2 times as likely as their white peers to be expelled. This kind of treatment persists not only in the farm country of Modesto but also in urban districts like Minneapolis, Minn. During the 1998-99 school year, only one state (South Carolina) suspended 9% or more of its white students, but 35 states suspended that percentage of blacks, according to The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University. The syndrome has even acquired a catchphrase: "learning while black."

In the past two years, advocacy groups in a dozen cities have taken up the cause, and the N.A.A.C.P. called on every state to submit a plan to redress discipline and other educational inequities by May 10. Last week the group announced that it would file civil rights complaints against the 22 states that missed the deadline. Meanwhile, legislators in Maryland and Rhode Island have set up task forces to study school discipline. In April, under a new state law, Ohio released suspension data broken down by race for each of its school districts. Earlier this month the Rev. Jesse Jackson addressed a conference at the Northwestern University School of Law titled "Dreams Deferred: A Closer Look at School Discipline."

Despite the current concern, the school-discipline gap is actually an old problem, first noted by social scientists a quarter-century ago. But with schools suspending nearly twice as many pupils as they did in the early '70s, the racial disparities have widened sharply. And today the penalties are stiffer. In the post-Columbine era, which has seen administrators reach for one-strike-and-you're-out, or zero-tolerance, policies, many schools no longer grant students a warning and a second chance, turning over even the most routine disciplinary matters to local police. "Schools now call in the police if a student is talking too much or doesn't do his homework," says Pedro Noguera, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

There is some evidence that black students are more likely to wind up in the dragnet. A study being released this fall by the Advancement Project, a Washington-based advocacy group, reports that black students, although they made up just 30% of the population of Miami-Dade County public schools in 2000-01, accounted for half the school arrests in that district. Says Judith Browne, senior attorney with the project: "This is no different from what happens on the street, only now it's school administrators abusing authority."



Predictably, talk of racial profiling turns very nasty very quickly. No matter the venue, the debate revolves around the same set of slippery questions: Do differences in data equal racism? Or could it be that blacks actually drive more recklessly or, in the case of schools, behave worse? Perhaps race is just incidental, and gender or class is the overriding factor. "This is not a simple matter, where the numbers speak for themselves," says Samuel Walker, a professor of criminal justice at the University of Nebraska, Omaha. "In the past two years there have been five or six conferences on traffic-stop data, and there's still no consensus."

The school-discipline picture is even cloudier. "In isolated cases, there appears to be a difference in treatment," says Susan Bowers, an enforcement director with the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights who investigates claims like the one filed in Modesto. "But often school districts have a justification, and race goes away." Researchers have theorized that anything from lead exposure to passive smoke may drive some students to act out more than others. The National Association of Secondary School Principals has deemed the discipline gap "an issue of socioeconomic status." The interim findings of the Rhode Island task force bolster this view. The group, after considering a student's race and whether he or she qualified for free lunch, concluded that "poverty is the single most pressing factor" associated with the disproportionate suspension of minority students in as many as a third of Rhode Island schools.

But a major study to be released in December in The Urban Review journal squarely shows the opposite. Russell Skiba, an associate professor of educational psychology at Indiana University, charted the discipline patterns of 11,000 middle-school students in a major urban district in Indiana, in which black students were more than twice as likely as their white peers to be sent to the principal's office or suspended - and four times as likely to be expelled. When Skiba factored in the financial status of the students and their families, the discipline gap did not budge. But a second finding smacks more overtly of discrimination: while white students were typically reprimanded for behaviors like smoking and vandalism, black students were more often disciplined for nebulous infractions like excessive noise and disrespect. "It's pretty clear that black students are referred for more subjective behaviors," he says. "You can choose not to use the word racism, but districts need to look seriously at why this is going on."

The more closely districts look, the less transparent the diagnoses. Beginning last year, Texas' Austin Independent School District began requiring principals to track discipline data by race to discern if any specific teachers were using a heavier hand with black students. The answer was yes, but the reasons were far from straightforward. Cornel Jones, principal of Austin's Oak Springs Elementary School, does not blame racism but chalks the problem up to "cultural misunderstandings" between his white teachers and the 97%-minority student body. One insidious source of confusion: When a teacher scolds a black or Latino student for a simple matter like talking out of turn, Jones says, that student typically looks away out of respect. Feeling her authority challenged, the teacher may send the student to the office. "It cycles up into a big monster, and then nothing the child can do is right," says Jones.

But when does misunderstanding slip over the line into prejudice? "There are racial misunderstandings, but there is also racial paranoia," says Beverly Cross, an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Education. "We see this a lot with black boys who are cute until about the fourth grade, and then teachers start to fear them." Linelle Clark, Austin's dropout-prevention coordinator, sees some evidence of this in her district. She recalls that "one principal noticed a teacher with a pattern of sending the same black kid to the office, and when he called her on it, she said, 'I'm scared of that child.'"

Because racial-profiling claims are difficult to prove in court, civil rights activists urge parents to bypass the legal system and confront school officials directly. In some cities, the N.A.A.C.P. accompanies families to expulsion hearings. Another tactic popular among advocates is to gather a district's discipline statistics - which are collected by the government and can be obtained by filing a Freedom of Information Act request - and prepare self-published reports for local news broadcasts. After enough badgering, some districts have begun to bend their discipline codes. Last fall Chicago public-schools chief Arne Duncan directed principals to stop handing out suspensions for picayune infractions like "gum chewing" and reserve the punishment for violent offenses. The district is working with local activists and civil rights attorneys to launch a program allowing students to be tried by a peer jury for violations such as arguing with a teacher or using profanity.

The conversation in Modesto has thus far been much less conciliatory. Despite repeated calls for reform from a small but vocal black parents' group, the district is not weighing any changes to its discipline code. Administrators will not comment on particular cases, but Jim Pfaff, Modesto's associate superintendent, points out that district policy stipulates a stiffer penalty for a student, like Russell, who inflicts injuries causing "stitches, loss of consciousness or a fracture." Pfaff attributes the high rate of black expulsions to an influx of black families from San Francisco "who do not understand" Modesto's discipline code, which provides few second chances - just consequences. He has little patience for charges of profiling. "Because we expel more males than females, does it mean that we discriminate against men too?" he asks. Even the black community has splintered over the issue, with some parents who want change accusing others of kowtowing to the district. "[She's] dealing with the people we're fighting, running to the white man with everything," sniffs Mack Wilson, education chairman of the local N.A.A.C.P., speaking of a black mother who joined with school officials to form Project Success, a group that tries to defuse small disciplinary matters before they escalate.

Russell is indifferent to the charges flying around him. He has more urgent matters to attend to, like the D and the F on his latest report card and whether they will affect his prospects for studying architecture in college. While parents and administrators continue to bicker, he has found his own remedy for the discipline gap. "You learn which teachers treat different ethnicities differently," he says. "And you learn when you're around them to stay quiet and keep to yourself."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: California; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: education; lawsuit; racialprofiling; schooldiscipline
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 81-100101-120121-140141-157 next last
To: Alas Babylon!
What an excellent point you make here!
121 posted on 06/15/2002 3:08:55 PM PDT by Boxsford
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]

To: Imal
Thank you so much for your kind words in your post #119, Imal. I'm sure teachers everywhere will greatly appreciate what you said there! :)
122 posted on 06/15/2002 3:19:47 PM PDT by summer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 119 | View Replies]

To: Imal, 2Trievers; Amelia; KC_For freedom; rightofrush; AmishDude; RobbyS; tinymontgomery...
From Imal's post #119, FYI --

Oh, and THANK YOU for being a teacher. That's right up there with police officer, firefighter and soldier, as far as I'm concerned -- and you have probably found elements of all three of those other noble professions in your list of responsibilities. It takes courage to be a teacher, especially these days, and I respect that. For any other teachers who may be reading this, that goes for you, too: a BIG SALUTE.

Best regards,

Imal

123 posted on 06/15/2002 3:23:13 PM PDT by summer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 119 | View Replies]

To: Jonathon Spectre; homeschool mama; Tonto Kowalski; Diana
See post #123. I meant to include all the teachers here, and I'm sure I still left out some by accident:)
124 posted on 06/15/2002 3:25:39 PM PDT by summer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 123 | View Replies]

To: mhking
Thanks for the ping.

I can't see where Kenneth and his "father" (who gets a low grade as a father-mine sure wouldn't have allowed us to be foul-mouthed and late to class) have a legit case.

Kids like Kenneth are one reason why I don't teach and I don't see what self-respecting architecture school would accept him with those grades, even if he is Black. If he got in he wouldn't last.

125 posted on 06/15/2002 8:51:09 PM PDT by mafree
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 77 | View Replies]

To: otterpond
I did become a teacher and, in fact, taught at a predominantly black college in Dallas. At least, I taught there until a kid entered my office with a knife in hand and told me that my assignments were too challenging and that I was interferring with his right to an education.

He went to jail.

What a moron. No wonder he went to jail.</font

126 posted on 06/15/2002 9:55:48 PM PDT by Kaslin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: Kaslin
fixed?
127 posted on 06/15/2002 10:06:25 PM PDT by Kaslin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 126 | View Replies]

To: LWalk18
This kid, a troublemaker, is whining because he got a worse punishment

My natural instincts are to agree but I have just had a run in with the school system and now believe there may be more to the story.

128 posted on 06/15/2002 10:18:49 PM PDT by farmfriend
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: mafree
I think there is more to this story than we are getting. His grades mean nothing. My son has been reading since he was 3, doing higher math since Kindergarten, scores in the 99 percentile and still gets bad grades. Having delt with the school system, it is possible that he was railroaded. I'm going to reserve judgement on this one.
129 posted on 06/15/2002 10:25:54 PM PDT by farmfriend
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 125 | View Replies]

To: farmfriend
I'm going to reserve judgement on this one.

If your kid was the one who received five stitches from this student, who admits he threw the first punch, gave him five stitches, you might be yelling that the school district didn't do enough by expelling the student. This schools district has a written code of student conduct, like all school districts, and, the consequences. For givinig your kid an injury requiring stitches, the consequence is expulsion.

This lawsuit is totally bogus, since the consequence would have been expulsion no matter what color or gender of student delivered the injury resulting in stitches.

With respect to whatever happened to you, you may have a legitimate gripe. But this kid and his father do not. They should be thanking the school district for not having this kid arrested -- and, the parents of the kid who got stitches may in fact be demanding right now that such an arrest should take place. School districts are not always right, but, they are not always wrong either. Expulsion from this school was an appropriate punishment in this matter. (And, any private school would have done the same in 2 seconds flat.)
130 posted on 06/16/2002 6:36:09 AM PDT by summer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 129 | View Replies]

To: summer
Is "racial profiling" on its way to replacing the "abuse excuse"? We should keep some common sense as part of our personal, community, and national security systems. If 90 percent of terrorists acts in the U.S. are committed by Middle Eastern males, PC will demand that law enforcement search out and question only women of Scandinavian background as suspects in terrorists acts. That doesn't make sense, does it? Neither does the new "abuse excuse."
131 posted on 06/16/2002 6:45:28 AM PDT by Whilom
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: mhking
As opposed to emphasizing excellence from black youth, this is yet another case where the NAACP would much rather enable substandard performance from students and their parents.

I've been seeing this sort of thing from the NAACP for 30 years, and I've yet to understand it. I suppose Booker T. Washington is still "right on":

"There is a class of colored people who make a business of keeping the troubles, the wrongs, and the hardships of the negro race before the public. Some of these people do not want the negro to lose his grievances, because they do not want to lose their jobs. There is a certain class of race-problem solvers who don't want the patient to get well."
- Booker T. Washington
1911

132 posted on 06/16/2002 7:05:56 AM PDT by Amelia
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 116 | View Replies]

To: summer
If parents and teachers explained why certain things are required and not try to use scare tactics or false information instead of just demanding blind obedience, there would certainly be more compliance. I read where planners use the results of 4th grade reading tests to determine how many prisons need to be built in the future. Does anyone know if that's true?
133 posted on 06/16/2002 7:20:45 AM PDT by ladylib
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 107 | View Replies]

To: summer
But this kid and his father do not.

I'm not trying to defend this kid or his dad. I'm just saying there may be more to this story than we are being told. It may not be as simple as a troubled kid throwing the first punch and getting expelled. I know this seems black and white from the story but it may not be. It is possible that the boy was having trouble with other students on a repeated basis that the school was doing nothing about. If this were true, his poor grades, behavior and final punch would be understandable, even justified. My point is, we don't know. I'm not going to judge the validity of the law suit or the boys behavior on what I am told here. Things are never that simple.

134 posted on 06/16/2002 10:26:12 AM PDT by farmfriend
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 130 | View Replies]

To: farmfriend
This seems pretty simple to me. A foul mouthed punk sucker punched another kid. The other kid whipped his ass and for his trouble got suspended for three days. The foul mouthed kid got a month for throwing the first punch and then continued his crap. Out he goes.
135 posted on 06/16/2002 10:35:22 AM PDT by jwalsh07
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 134 | View Replies]

To: farmfriend
It is possible that the boy was having trouble with other students on a repeated basis that the school was doing nothing about.

OK. What you mention sometimes does happen -- but did it happen here?

If it was even being alleged by the boy and his dad, I am sure it would have found its way into this TIME magazine article, which is extremely sympathic to the boy and his father. But, no mention here.

I agree with you that at times, there are matters and facts not immediately known.

However, I would also point out this: at other times, there is a kid who is basically a bully, and finally, he goes too far. That happens too. And, when it does, the situation can be fairly cut and dried.

Based on the boy's own admissions in this article, I bet you could easily find a number of other students who have also been called names by this kid, or felt compelled to walk away quickly before he threw the first punch at them.

Yet, now, in this particular instance, he threw the first punch, after some name calling -- and, kept beating up on a kid until the result was an injury requiring five stitches. That's a very serious injury. And, that's why a kid who does this gets expelled.
136 posted on 06/16/2002 10:50:05 AM PDT by summer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 134 | View Replies]

To: Imal
...All though I agree with your response, you say racist father. Racist has been lumped in to mean prejudice, bigot, narrow minded, hate filled, for the PC. These words have different meanings. The racism argument/definition is Bullsht!

...But, you might be right about the father being a racist...

137 posted on 06/16/2002 11:41:07 AM PDT by gargoyle
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: Skooz
He not only will make it through college with a degree in archectue, he will probably graduate with honors.
How?

A program that warms the hearts of liberals [communists]known as affirmative Action.

He only will have to show up on registration day of each term.

138 posted on 06/16/2002 12:15:34 PM PDT by sport
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: sport; Skooz
A program that warms the hearts of liberals [communists]known as affirmative action.

However, not in FL -- no college is allowed to consider race as a factor in admissions anymore, because of Gov. Bush's One FL program.
139 posted on 06/16/2002 2:23:53 PM PDT by summer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 138 | View Replies]

To: summer
However, I would also point out this: at other times, there is a kid who is basically a bully, and finally, he goes too far.

This is true, there was such a case here in Sac. recently. A kis blew a gum rapper projectile at a boy and put his eye out. The father was trying to portray it as an unfortunate accident until the neighbors came out in force and told what terrors these boys were. They received 9 days in juvy. This could be one of those cases. I don't discount that at all.

There are many times when I will pass judgement based on what I read or surmise. I don't feel comfortable, and I admit this is solely based on my feeling, in doing that this time.

140 posted on 06/16/2002 6:13:26 PM PDT by farmfriend
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 136 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 81-100101-120121-140141-157 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson