In Mississippi, if kindergarteners violate the dress code or act out in class, they may end up in the back of a police car.
A story about one five-year-old particularly stands out. The little
boy was required to wear black shoes to school. Because he didn’t have
black shoes, his mom used a marker to cover up his white and red
sneakers. A bit of red and white were still noticeable, so the child was
taken home by the cops.
The child was escorted out of school so he and his mother would be taught a lesson.
Ridiculous? Perhaps. But incidents such as this are happening across Mississippi. A new report, “Handcuffs on Success: The Extreme School Discipline Crisis in Mississippi Public Schools,” exposes just how bad it’s become.
Released on January 17, the report is a joint project between state
chapters of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and the
Mississippi Coalition for the Prevention of Schoolhouse to Jailhouse and
the Advancement Project.
The report examined more than 100 school districts and claimed that
black students are affected by harsh disciplinary actions at a much
greater rate than their white peers. It notes that “for every one white
student who is given an out-of-school suspension, three black students
are suspended, even though black students comprise just half of the
student population.”
Carlos McCray, an associate professor at Fordham University Graduate
School of Education in the Education Leadership Administration Program,
says, “Research has shown that students who are subjected to multiple
suspensions and expulsions are more likely to drop out of school. And we
all know where this leads.”
More: In Mississippi, Dress Code Violations and Back-Talk Send Students Straight to Jail
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