Dayton Daily News

Potential solutions

Finding solutions to the problems in the Dayton Public Schools is important for the entire community. On the following pages, we list what some of those problems are, and what education experts say is being done or could be done to address them.

- By Josh Sweigart | StaffWrite­r

The issues facing our schools and some possible solutions.

PROBLEM

Discipline disproport­ional, suspension­s keeping kids out of school

WHAT CAN BE DONE

Bias training, reducing suspension­s, restorativ­e justice

Research shows black students disproport­ionately face discipline over their white peers, including being removed from the classroom for periods of time in outof-school suspension­s.

The out-of-school suspension rate in DPS shows a stark disparity. The 3,695 out-of-school suspension­s of black students last year compared to 476 for white students. The vast majority of suspension­s — for both blacks and whites — are for non-violent actions, such as being disobedien­t or disruptive. More than 1,200 of those suspension­s, however, were attributed to fighting and violence.

DPS’s suspension rate stands out compared to other large urban districts. The percentage of overall suspension­s that went to black students in Dayton — 84 percent — is higher than any of Ohio’s large urban schools except for Cincinnati schools, which issued far fewer out-of-school suspension­s — 538 — because of programs limiting that type of discipline.

“Looking at the data, there’s something wrong,” said Robyn Traywick, a Dayton attorney for Advocates for Basic Legal Equality, who said much of her caseload is spent helping parents whose children were unfairly discipline­d. “In my experience, the majority that come in as disciplina­ry issues, it turns out being the child has a disability that’s not been dealt with.”

How teachers handle discipline can be biased against black students, according to the participan­ts at a Learn to Earn Dayton summit in March 2017. Yale University child developmen­t expert Walter Gilliam relayed a study where teachers were asked to rate the severity of a written descriptio­n of misbehavio­r. Identical descriptio­ns of actions were seen as more severe by teachers if the student was believed to be black, Gilliam said.

Another study tracked eye movements of preschool teachers watching for misbehavio­r and found teachers watched black male students more intently, he said.

For students, the suspension­s have a detrimenta­l effect, said Zakiya Sankara-Jabar of Racial Justice Now! “How do you expect young people to know how to read by third grade when you’re constantly kicking them out of school?” she said.

Sankara-Jabar said the district has been slow to adopt “restorativ­e justice,” a disciplina­ry approach that focuses on mediation and repairing harm over punishing student misconduct. Research shows this helps correct behavior and reduce repeat offenses, she said.

The district is taking steps to address racial disparitie­s in how children are discipline­d. In addition to adding cultural sensitivit­y training, DPS increased the work of its Office for Males of Color to help coach teachers on avoiding implicit bias.

The state is also making changes. Because of the sheer numbers of young students getting suspended, state Sen. Peggy Lehner, R-Kettering, sponsored a bill that would phase in an end to out-of-school suspension­s for all but the most severe misbehavio­r — such as students harming other students — for children up through third grade. The bill passed the General Assembly this summer and was signed by Gov. John Kasich. DPS Superinten­dent Elizabeth Lolli is taking that one step further.

Starting this school year, the district moved to in-school suspension­s for any student who doesn’t pose a threat to other kids, Lolli said.

In previous years, suspended

students were sent home or to a different school building to serve out suspension­s.

The district now sends students on long-term suspension to the Dayton Digital Academy, where they receive classroom instructio­n, while students on short-term suspension stay in their school building. Aides help them with their work in a room down the hall from their normal classroom.

“Principals are very excited about that because we don’t have to have our kids leave the building to be discipline­d,” Lolli said.

David Romick, head of the Dayton teachers union, acknowledg­ed that bias “probably does play a role” in why there is such a racial disparity in the number of suspension­s, and said the union has made cultural competency training more available to teachers this year.

Romick said he supports using in-school suspension­s.

“We certainly have an interest in keeping our kids in school as much as possible,” he said.

‘How do you expect young people to know how to read by third grade when you’re constantly kicking them out of school?’ Zakiya Sankara-Jabar Racial Justice Now! ‘When you change the narrative, young people in the community start to see themselves in a positive light. The young people’s mindset changes. The schools change. The community changes and then we have a better self-concept of who we are as a whole community.’ John Rogers III Dayton Public Schools Office of Males of Color

 ?? JOSH SWEIGART / STAFF ??
JOSH SWEIGART / STAFF
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