Chicago Sun-Times

SCHOOLS’ SHIFT FROM HARSH SUSPENSION­S SHOWSGREAT PROMISE

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Abuzz phrase in the world of social services is “evidenced- based solutions.” When trying to fix a problem, that is to say, don’t just follow your gut. Do what the best research shows really works.

And you know what? That turns out to be good advice, as the Chicago Public Schools can testify.

Four years ago, CPS adopted a new disciplina­ry code, one that moved away from out- of- school suspension­s and expulsions. Instead, kids who caused trouble would serve fewer and shorter suspension­s, and more often serve those suspension­s right in school. While our gut might tell us that the best way to maintain order in a school is zero- tolerance punishment — suspend, expel and strike fear in students — the best research showed there was a better way. Specifical­ly, a persuasive 2011 report by the University of Chicago’s Consortium on Chicago School Research found that schools with high suspension rates were less safe than schools with lower rates. And what really made a school safe, the research revealed, was positive relationsh­ips between students, teachers and staff.

CPS, to its credit, embraced that approach. It shifted away from harsh punishment and toward more counseling and “social and emotional” learning. What has been the result?

At the same time Chicago’s schools are chalking up improvemen­ts in ACT scores and elementary math and reading levels, suspension­s and expulsions are the lowest since CPS began keeping track. Out- of- school suspension­s have declined 67 percent, on a per- student basis, since the 2012- 13 school year. In- school suspension­s have declined 7 percent. Expulsions have dropped 74 pecent. In all of these cases, most of the decline came immediatel­y after the new discipline policy was put in place and flattened out in the last year.

Troubling, though, charter schools, which do not have to adhere to the CPS discipline code, are kicking out students five times as often as traditiona­l public schools, reports Lauren FitzPatric­k of the Sun- Times. Remember that the next time a charter school brags about its fantastic graduation and college- acceptance rates; it likely gave the boot to less promising students long before then.

For all we know, the change in disciplina­ry policy and the scholastic gains at traditiona­l public schools are unrelated, but we would be surprised if that were so. Young people are not weeds, to be plucked and tossed when they offend. Schools — even charter schools — do better when they change bad student behavior rather than simply punish it.

Troubling, though, charter schools, which do not have to adhere to the CPS discipline code, are kicking out students five times as often as traditiona­l public schools.

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