The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Parent: We have to be the ones who want to improve schools

Discipline

- Reporter Cassidy Alexander and data specialist Jennifer Peebles contribute­d to this report.

and so that’s why as a school district we’re leaning into what proactive measures we can take on the front end to prevent some of those incidents from happening,” said Superinten­dent Mike Looney.

Two of the three alternativ­e schools that serve expelled students are full, while the third is nearing capacity, he said. The district, which contracts with an outside provider to run those sites, is looking to add more seats.

Nearly a third of the students expelled in the first part of this year were in ninth grade. The first year of high school is always challengin­g as students develop social skills and test boundaries, Looney said.

But this year’s freshman class also spent much of its formative middle school years in virtual learning. When the students returned to schools in August, they had to relearn routines and figure out how to resolve conflicts in healthy ways.

“This pandemic has done something to all of us in general, adults and children alike. We’re just having difficulty with the interactio­n we haven’t seen in the past,” said Kim Hartwell, president of the South Fulton PTA Council and mother of a Westlake High School student.

School safety

Many school districts are confrontin­g student safety issues, which some say reflects a rise in violent crime in cities. In a recent meeting with Gov. Brian Kemp, superinten­dents asked for help as their schools respond to social media challenges urging bad behavior, student suicides and fights.

In Henry County Schools, the superinten­dent has said discipline incidents are down this year but those that do occur are more intense. Gwinnett officials reported in January that numbers are similar to pre-pandemic levels, but remain too high. The DeKalb district said it could not provide current school year discipline data because “it is still being collected and verified.”

Fulton started sounding the alarm at school board meetings soon after classes started.

From August through early February, Fulton schools reported 17 incidents involving a handgun, more than any of the previous four years.

Most campus weapons and fights can be traced to situations that started outside of school the previous night or weekend, Looney said.

“They’re not bringing the gun to school to do harm, per se. They’re bringing a gun to school for protection to and from school,” he said. “With very little exception, it has been (that) there’s issues in the community.”

Looney said he’s concerned about not just the number of incidents, but also the severity of student misconduct. The district reported more than 3,000 fighting incidents in each of the two years prior to the pandemic. In nearly six months this school year, it logged 2,052.

Fights involving three or more students now fall into the highest tier of offenses, making group fighting punishable by expulsion. Depending on the specifics of the melee, it also can lead to criminal charges, as do weapons cases, Looney said.

A series of fights disrupted the first few weeks of classes at Tri-Cities High School in East Point. After one major fight in August involving about 10 students, school police officers recovered two handguns, according to police reports. They found a loaded .38-caliber handgun, with one bullet in the chamber and one in the magazine, in a book bag.

Students bringing knives to school is also a concern. There

have been 58 incidents in nearly six months, up from 54 for all of 2018-2019.

In September, a student at Centennial High School in Roswell was stabbed and sent to the hospital with non-life-threatenin­g injuries. In January, two students were stabbed when a fight broke out at Banneker High School near Union City.

Since then, the district added 10 more security workers, at a cost of $157,200, to monitor cameras and supervise exits, stairwells and other campus spots. The additional personnel are assigned to five south Fulton high schools that have had three or more group fights.

Vincent Edmonds has three children in Fulton schools and leads the parent teacher student associatio­n at Bear Creek Middle School, where he has a seventh grader.

He said more parent involvemen­t, not extra security, is the answer. More adults are needed to model good behavior and supervise chaotic cafeterias and hallways between classes, when students sometimes scuffle. When he volunteers in the lunchroom, students shape up.

“I don’t think our parents understand that our presence is what’s needed,” he said. “Without us, nothing improves. So we have to be the ones who want to improve our schools.”

Finding solutions

The security response is part of what Fulton leaders say is a twopronged approach to addressing disciplina­ry problems.

It involves law-and-order minded strategies that are in place or under considerat­ion such as upgrading video surveillan­ce equipment and lighting, paying school police to work more days, filing criminal charges and setting strict standards for behavior.

Leaders said they’re also supporting students’ social and emotional needs to prevent incidents from occurring. That includes building stronger school communitie­s and rewarding positive behaviors.

At Tri-Cities, students flagged as high-risk because they’ve had a physical altercatio­n or other problems participat­e in restorativ­e circles led by a conflict-resolution expert. During a recent session, Jacqueline Beard-Cathey guided several girls through a discussion of how to calm down when emotions cloud their judgment. Their ideas: Listen to music, talk to someone, write.

The sessions push students “to delve into facts not feelings,” said Carmena Woods, an administra­tive assistant who works with the program: ”Our ultimate goal is to keep them in school.”

The district plans to open “safe centers” next fall at Tri-Cities and North Springs high schools. The centers are designed to provide students with services and community resources needed to succeed in school, such as clothing, mentoring and work-based learning. Banneker already has a center, which provides counseling, discipline support and necessitie­s such as food.

Looney also proposed hiring more social workers next year.

Some violations are so serious that suspension or expulsion is warranted, said Deana Holiday Ingraham, mayor of East Point. But Ingraham, who previously served as the district’s director of student discipline, said how students behave is often a manifestat­ion of something else happening in their lives.

She said schools need to make sustained financial investment­s to tackle the root cause. That means hiring more social workers and counselors, setting high expectatio­ns and making sure students “see themselves in the curriculum” so they’re engaged in class.

The district’s actions thus far are “a start,” she said, but “there’s more that can be done.”

Hartwell, the Westlake mother and PTA council president, said law enforcemen­t measures aren’t enough. She said it also will require engaged parents and community members and attention to children’s social and emotional health.

Though she’s heard about more group fights this year, she doesn’t feel her son is in danger in school.

“I don’t have a problem with him going to class. I do trust that the administra­tion has eyes on this,” she said.

Most campus weapons and fights can be traced to situations that started outside of school the previous night or weekend, Superinten­dent Mike Looney said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY BOB ANDRES/ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Jacqueline Beard-Cathey, school community facilitato­r, helps Tri-Cities High School students with conflict resolution, including lessons on how to become more calm after something has clouded their judgment. They collective­ly came up with ideas of listening to music, talking to someone or writing.
PHOTOS BY BOB ANDRES/ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM Jacqueline Beard-Cathey, school community facilitato­r, helps Tri-Cities High School students with conflict resolution, including lessons on how to become more calm after something has clouded their judgment. They collective­ly came up with ideas of listening to music, talking to someone or writing.
 ?? ?? During the restorativ­e circle sessions at Tri-Cities High School in East Point, whoever holds the ball is the person who gets to speak and be heard as students work on conflict resolution.
During the restorativ­e circle sessions at Tri-Cities High School in East Point, whoever holds the ball is the person who gets to speak and be heard as students work on conflict resolution.
 ?? SOURCE: FULTON COUNTY SCHOOLS ??
SOURCE: FULTON COUNTY SCHOOLS

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