New Straits Times

CONSEQUENC­ES OF INCREASED SECURITY IN SCHOOLS

Students at policed schools are much more likely to get arrested in cases where there isn’t enough evidence to actually charge them with a crime, writes

- JAMES CAMPBELL jamesca@deakin.edu.au The writer is a lecturer in Education in Australia.

AMONG the many responses to the distressin­g outbreaks of gun violence in American schools have been calls both to arm teachers and to increase police presence in schools as a deterrent to crime.

While the calls to arm teachers given the recent massacres of innocent students have received considerab­le pushback from teachers, the calls for more police and security guards to be placed in schools are seemingly part of a broader trend towards securitisa­tion of education.

Before starting to discuss this issue it is important to make a distinctio­n between what we usually refer to as security guards in a school whose usual task is to guard the school from theft or vandalism and keep school premises generally safe and a newer phenomenon of what are known as in the American context as “School Resource Officers” (SROs) being present in schools. SROs have a different set of tasks to what we usually think of as school guards.

Matthew T. Theriot in an article titled: ‘School resource officers and the criminaliS­ation of student behaviour’ which appeared in the Journal of Criminal Justice explains some of the key tasks of SROs and points out that: “School resource officers in the United States (also known as school police officers or school liaison officers) typically are employed by a local law enforcemen­t agency and assigned to work in a school or schools.”

They perform traditiona­l law enforcemen­t functions like patrolling school buildings and grounds, investigat­ing criminal complaints, handling students who violate school rules or laws, and trying to minimise disruption­s during the school day and at after-school activities.

Critics of school policing programmes, such as Dara Lind writing for Vox, point to the growing phenomenon both of school guards on school grounds during school hours and SROs and to the fact that, “the schools that are most likely to have a daily enforcemen­t presence on school grounds are the schools with the most poor students.”

Furthermor­e Lind points out that, “there is a correlatio­n among all public schools between students; race and the presence of an SRO or security guard. The more non-white students a school has, the more likely it is to have a full-time SRO or private security guard on campus.”

Finally, and this point is critical, Lind argues: “Students at policed schools were much more likely to get arrested than students at unpoliced schools, but they weren’t any more likely to actually be charged in court for weapons, drugs, alcohol, or assault.”

In other words according to Lind, “students at policed schools were much more likely to get arrested in cases where there wasn’t enough evidence to actually charge them with a crime.”

Criminalis­ation of what otherwise may have been simply school behaviour issues which are usually best handled through school disciplina­ry systems is one of the most egregious and unintended consequenc­es of increased securitisa­tion in schools.

The promise of schooling especially to the disadvanta­ged has been that it provides a ladder to improvemen­t and opens opportunit­ies for students from disadvanta­ged background­s to advance themselves and better their lives.

The results of educationa­l opportunit­y for disadvanta­ged students translates into increased participat­ion in higher education and ultimately into a more socially inclusive and just society.

It is therefore pertinent upon all of us who have an interest in education and especially in the impact that education has on social inclusivit­y and justice to take a close look at the issue of increasing securitisa­tion in schools.

T. Theriot makes the case clearly and eloquently. He writes: “As police and school security become more and more omnipresen­t at schools, school resource officers, teachers, principals, and all school staff need to be mindful of the negative consequenc­es associated with punitive disciplina­ry strategies and criminal arrests.

For most youth, especially those from lower socioecono­mic neighborho­ods, education is an invaluable resource to insure a brighter future. To deny them an education because of a minor classroom disturbanc­e or hallway disruption is unacceptab­le, unfair, and may permanentl­y limit their prospects for a better life.”

This discussion has drawn upon the American example to illustrate the trend of securitisa­tion of schools and its potential to negatively impact on students from lower socioecono­mic background­s.

It also brings to mind the tensions between the promise of education to the poor as providing a ladder of opportunit­y and the way in which some policies can possibly derail this.

For those of us concerned about the social justice mission of higher education, what occurs in the pre-tertiary levels of our education system is not irrelevant to that mission.

Policy trends which may stem from our attempt to address very real problems in schools and may be implemente­d with the best of intentions may despite all of this have very real and negative impacts on disadvanta­ged students, the very cohort to which

It is therefore pertinent upon all of us who have an interest in education and especially in the impact that education has on social inclusivit­y and justice to take a close look at the issue of increasing securitisa­tion in schools.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Protestors rally outside the Florida Capitol in Tallahasse­e urging lawmakers to reform gun laws, in the wake of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, the US.
REUTERS PIC Protestors rally outside the Florida Capitol in Tallahasse­e urging lawmakers to reform gun laws, in the wake of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, the US.
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