21 de janeiro de 2016

Schools, black children, and corporal punishment



REUTERS/Tim Johnson-Unidentified elementary school students look out of a bus window, at the Reliant Center, in Houston September 8, 2005. Buses are sending students to their first day of classes since coming to Houston to avoid the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
As we approach the annual celebration of Dr. King’s life, it is worth examining the difference in how our schools discipline black and white children. In public schools in the United States, black children are twice as likely as white children to be subject to corporal punishment. Figure 1 shows the comparison, derived from nationwide data reported by schools to the Office of Civil Rights, Department of Education.[1] (All data is for the 2011-2012 school year, the latest year available.) The continuing disproportionate corporal punishment of black children is a reminder that some aspects of the “bad old days” are not fully behind us.
Incidence of corporal punishment per 100 students, annual rate
Figure 1
The 42,000 reported incidents of black boys being beaten, and 15,000 incidents for black girls, by educators in their school reflects two facts. First, black students are more likely to be located in states that use corporal punishment extensively. Second, in many states black students are disproportionately likely to be singled out for corporal punishment. Figure 2 shows the annual incidence of corporal punishment by state, with states where the incidence is less than once per ten thousand students greyed out.
Annual incidents of corporal punishment per 100 students
Figure 2
While corporal punishment is used in almost every state, seven states account for 80 percent of school corporal punishment in the United States: Mississippi, Texas, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Tennessee, and Oklahoma. [2] For black students, six of these states (Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Arkansas, Texas, and Tennessee) plus Louisiana account for 90 percent of corporal punishment. One reason that black students are subject to more corporal punishment is that they live in those states responsible for most of the corporal punishment of all children.
Where is corporal punishment racially disproportionate? Essentially, and sadly unsurprisingly, the first answer is that black students are disproportionately beaten in parts of the Deep South. Black students are twice as likely to be struck as white students in North Carolina and Georgia, 70 percent more likely in Mississippi, 40 percent more likely in Louisiana, and 40 percent more likely in Arkansas. Figure 3 shows the ratio of the frequency of corporal punishment for black students compared to the frequency for white students, with states where the incidence is less than once per ten thousand students or where the rate is equal or lower for black students greyed out.
States with disproportionate corporal punishment relative probability of punishment black vs white students
Figure 3
Some high corporal punishment states are not particularly racially disproportionate. Texas, notably, uses corporal punishment on black students and white with equal likelihood. Texas shows up on the lists of where black students are hit because it is a large state that administers corporal punishment at a moderately high rate. Alabama—where the rate of corporal punishment is 10 times the national average—also shows equal rates of black and white children experiencing physical violence from educators. In North Carolina, black students are twice as likely to be struck as white students, but North Carolina uses corporal punishment relatively infrequently and so accounts for a small proportion of punishment of black students. Notably, in South Carolina the rate of corporal punishment is below the national average and is not racially disproportionate.
While heavy use of corporal punishment is more common in states of the former Confederacy, racially disproportionate application happens in northern states as well. Schools in Pennsylvania and Michigan are nearly twice as likely to beat black children as white, although both have low overall rates of corporal punishment.
Perhaps most surprisingly, corporal punishment in Maine is wildly disproportionate—with black children being eight times as likely to be hurt as white children. Colorado, Ohio, and California also have rates of corporal punishment for black children that are 70 percent or more higher than for white children.
In Figure 4, I show rates of corporal punishment for white students on the horizontal axis and for black students on the vertical axis. States above the 45° line in Figure 2 have racially disproportionate corporal punishments. The states clustered at the lower left of the graph have relatively lower rates of corporal punishment, sometimes disproportionate and sometimes not.
Mississippi stands alone.
Corporal punishment per 100 students
Figure 4
While the symbolism of continued physical violence against black children is inescapable, the disproportionate application of other forms of discipline may be of even greater concern. Except in Mississippi and Arkansas, the typical black student will probably not be subjected to corporal punishment during his school career. In contrast, school suspensions are much more common. Figure 5 shows rates of suspension by race.
Suspensions per 100 students
Figure 5
Note that an astounding 15 percent of black students receive an out-of-school suspension in a given year, a rate nearly 4 times that of white students; in-school suspensions are more than twice as likely among black students. Figure 5 shows out-of-school suspension rates for black and white students by state.
Out-of-school suspensions per 100 students
Figure 6
Out-of-school suspensions are applied disproportionately in every state—all points are above the red line. And these discipline patterns do not line up with old geographic patterns. The highest suspension rates for black students are in Wisconsin. And the greatest disparities (measured as the ratio of black-to-white suspension rates) are in the District of Columbia.
Every time a child is beaten in school and every time one is suspended and thus loses learning time, something or someone has failed that child along the way, regardless of the “reason” for the punishment. So long as these failures fall disproportionately on black children, we are not yet living up to the dream that “children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”
Appendix

Discipline per 100 students

Corporal punishment
Out-of-school suspension

Black
White
Black
White
Alabama
3.583033
3.869057
17.90929
5.468595
Alaska
NA
0.103160
8.592955
3.645956
Arizona
0.029171
0.050941
12.32562
4.555046
Arkansas
5.897032
4.205989
18.15124
4.832772
California
0.051100
0.029146
14.44344
4.803916
Colorado
0.057981
0.022656
11.12507
3.413624
Connecticut
0.030811
0.025587
12.19697
2.117891
Delaware
0.000000
0.000000
18.50083
5.836653
District of Columbia
0.059520
0.000000
16.31737
0.872663
Florida
0.197324
0.239999
19.85793
8.790211
Georgia
1.125453
0.577535
16.07318
4.434872
Hawaii
0.000000
0.000000
1.538462
1.145156
Idaho
NA
0.036444
5.891822
2.945636
Illinois
0.031373
0.038082
15.35005
3.406990
Indiana
0.063847
0.062103
20.57063
5.230889
Iowa
0.022850
0.061744
15.22203
2.656221
Kansas
0.011166
0.013882
12.80741
2.792517
Kentucky
0.048563
0.190368
13.02577
4.424482
Louisiana
0.759494
0.537434
13.41064
5.476110
Maine
0.432043
0.057917
8.010801
3.839565
Maryland
0.000000
NA
8.901257
3.729914
Massachusetts
0.004890
0.015254
10.63718
3.376658
Michigan
0.179947
0.090549
20.77535
5.397792
Minnesota
0.030967
0.028806
13.56956
2.204543
Mississippi
8.059325
4.747161
15.36107
5.419384
Missouri
0.683648
0.553408
20.52077
4.393734
Montana
0.000000
0.043081
5.335968
3.311940
Nebraska
0.019723
0.028463
18.29791
3.194068
Nevada
0.000000
NA
12.38813
4.214409
New Hampshire
0.000000
0.051235
13.11094
5.099147
New Jersey
0.018340
0.016058
11.39809
2.773110
New Mexico
0.088313
0.007161
10.81837
4.902616
New York
0.022768
0.031960
6.698778
3.031192
North Carolina
0.045919
0.022889
16.71766
5.230456
North Dakota
NA
0.043300
2.846739
1.343501
Ohio
0.054495
0.028990
18.37799
4.323960
Oklahoma
0.937784
1.650464
15.15327
4.706784
Oregon
0.000000
0.006020
11.93396
4.788382
Pennsylvania
0.199160
0.099676
17.13759
3.469501
Rhode Island
NA
NA
16.29604
6.434000
South Carolina
0.021752
0.020802
17.06215
6.371353
South Dakota
0.116550
0.121998
8.071096
2.184158
Tennessee
1.020022
1.148149
19.35562
4.376236
Texas
0.825640
0.843602
12.84153
2.717089
Utah
NA
0.004343
6.567593
1.978244
Vermont
0.000000
0.030065
6.702997
4.289775
Virginia
0.020342
0.017897
14.10793
4.615755
Washington
NA
0.001729
11.65880
4.614335
West Virginia
0.143052
0.133395
17.50681
7.994511
Wisconsin
0.010465
0.027360
25.60784
2.697800
Wyoming
0.000000
0.016005
8.499234
3.295765
Discipline per 100 students is 100 times the ratio of discipline of a particular type reported for all students of a given race to the corresponding overall enrollment figures given by the Office of Civil Rights, for 2011-2012. 

[1] The Office of Civil Rights collected data from all U.S. public schools. The data used here is aggregated to the state and national level by the Office of Civil Rights and can be found athttp://ocrdata.ed.gov/StateNationalEstimations/Estimations_2011_12. Data is reported either directly by school districts or by states’ education agencies on behalf of the districts. Data on corporal punishment may count multiple incidents for a single student as multiple occurrences. According to the Office of Civil Rights, “Corporal punishment is paddling, spanking, or other forms of physical punishment imposed on a student.” Data for suspensions reports counts of students with multiple out-of-school suspensions as a single incident. Because all data is self-reported, it is not known whether all districts use the same standards in reporting.
[2] According to the Gundersen National Child Protection Training Center corporal punishment in schools is banned in most states. While most states do not permit corporal punishment in schools, they nonetheless report that schools beat children. Only Delaware and Hawaii report no corporal punishment. Corporal punishment is also rare in Maryland and Nevada, with fewer than three instances reported.

Authors

  • Dick Startz
Image Source: © Reuters Photographer / Reuter
      

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