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Title: School Discipline: Students with Disabilities and Ethnic Minorities


1
School Discipline Students with Disabilities and
Ethnic Minorities
  • Stefan M. Rosenzweig
  • Scholar in Residence, Center for Language
    Minority Education and Research,CSULB
  • April 25, 2005

2
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 347
U.S.483 (1954)
  • Ch.J.Warren the question presented Does
    segregation of children in public schools solely
    on the basis of race, even though the physical
    facilities and other tangible factors may be
    equal, deprive the children of the minority group
    of equal educational opportunities? We believe
    that it does.

3
Brown Reasoning
  • Today, education is perhaps the most important
    function of state and local government.
    Compulsory school attendance laws and the great
    expenditures for education both demonstrate our
    recognition of the importance of education to our
    democratic society.It is the very foundation of
    good citizenship.In these days, it is doubtful
    that any child may reasonably be expected to
    succeed in life if he is denied the opportunity
    of an education. Such an opportunity, where the
    state has undertaken to provide it , is a right
    which must be made available to all on equal
    terms.

4
Milliken v. Bradley, 418 U.S. 717 (1974)
  • United States Supreme Court overturns ruling that
    would have abolished city-suburban school
    districts surrounding Detroit Michigan.
  • The ruling would impact fifty-three suburban
    school districts and over 300,000 students.

5
Milliken holding
  • C.J.Burger The controlling principle
    consistently expounded in our holdings is that
    the scope of the remedy is determined by the
    nature and extent of the constitutional
    violation. Swann, Before the boundaries of
    separate and autonomous school districts may be
    set aside by consolidating the separate units for
    remedial purposes or by imposing a cross-district
    remedy, it must   first be shown that there has
    been a constitutional violation within one
    district that produces a significant segregative
    effect in another district. Specifically, it must
    be shown that racially discriminatory acts of the
    state or local school districts, or of a single
    school district have been a substantial cause of
    interdistrict segregation. Thus an interdistrict
    remedy might be in order where the racially
    discriminatory acts of one or more school
    districts caused racial segregation in an
    adjacent district, or where district lines have
    been deliberately drawn on the basis of race. In
    such circumstances an interdistrict remedy would
    be appropriate to eliminate the interdistrict
    segregation directly caused by the constitutional
    violation. Conversely, without an interdistrict
    violation and interdistrict effect, there is no
    constitutional wrong calling for an interdistrict
    remedy.

6
(Last Class) Misclassification Retarded
  • Diana v. California Bd. Of Education (U.S.Dist.
    Ct. N.D. of Ca. 1970) Linguistic Bias
    Mexican-American Spanish Speaking students
    diagnosed with English IQ tests over represented
    in classes for the educable mentally retarded
    (EMR) throughout California. Tests and EMR
    curriculum not reflective of students culture or
    language. Suit settled by state It is the
    intent of the State Board of Education that all
    children who came from homes in which the primary
    spoken language is other than English shall be
    interviewed, and examined, both in English and in
    the primary language used in his home. The
    examiner should take cognizance of the childs
    differential language facility. Any assessment of
    the childs intellectual functioning should be
    made on the basis of the spoken language most
    familiar to the child. In determining the
    intellectual functioning of a child whose primary
    language is other than English, it is recommended
    that the examiner utilize more than one
    instrument and include, tests with performance
    scales.

7
Misclassification Retarded
  • Larry P. v. Riles,495 F. Supp.926 (U.S. Dist. Ct.
    N.D., Ca 1979), Racial and Cultural Bias Judge
    Robert Peckham reviews history of IQ testing and
    finds its historical linkage to genetic notions
    of racial differences in intelligence. Holds that
    standardized intelligence tests are racially and
    culturally biased, have a discriminatory impact
    against black children, and have not been
    validated for the purpose of essentially
    permanent placements of black children into
    educationally dead-end classes for the so-called
    educable mentally retarded.
  • Prohibition on IQ testing on African-American
    school children still enforced by CA Dept of
    Education.

8
School Suspensions long criticized
  • From School Suspensions Are They Helping
    Children?, Childrens Defense Fund 1975, p.49
  • Suspensions (1) take away educational time that
    may cause marginal, weak or poorly motivated
    students to drop out permanently (2) label
    children as troublemakers,thereby making
    repeated behavior problems more likely (3) deny
    children needed helpand (4) contribute to
    juvenile delinquency by putting unsupervised
    children and those with problems into the
    streets.
  • Finally, additional harm accrues to children who
    are mistakenly suspended, suspended arbitrarily
    or by unfair means. For the black and other
    minority and poor children who are suspended by
    officials with double standards for behavior and
    punishment, the repeated reinforcement of
    discrimination will leave bitter scars.

9
Goss v. Lopez,419 U.S.565 (1975)
  • Facts Altercation at a public high school result
    in several students being suspended. None was
    given a hearing to determine the operative facts
    underlying the suspension, but each, together
    with his or her parents, was offered the
    opportunity to attend a conference, subsequent to
    the effective date of the suspension, to discuss
    the students future. As a consequencethe
    record does not disclose how the principal went
    about making the decision to suspend, nor does
    it disclose on what information the decision was
    based. It is clear from the record that no
    hearing was ever held.
  • Court holds A 10-day suspension from school is
    not de minimis in our view and may not be imposed
    in complete disregard of the Due Process Clause.
    education is perhaps the most important function
    of state and local governments,and the total
    exclusion from the educational process for more
    than a trivial periodis a serious event in the
    life of the suspended child. Neither the property
    interest in educational benefits temporarily
    denied nor the liberty interest in reputation,
    which is also implicated, is so insubstantial
    that suspensions may constitutionally be imposed
    by any procedure the school chooses, no matter
    how arbitrary.

10
What Process is Due (Goss)
  • We stop short of construing the Due Process
    Clause to require, countrywide, that hearings in
    connection with short suspensions must afford the
    student the opportunity to secure counsel, to
    confront and cross-examine witnesses supporting
    the charge, or to call his own witnesses to
    verify his version of the incidentOn the other
    hand, requiring effective notice and informal
    hearing permitting the student to give his
    version of the events will provide a meaningful
    hedge against erroneous action in the short
    suspension not exceeding 10 days.

11
Racially Disparate School Discipline
  • School prevails Tasby v. Estes, 643 F.2d 1103
    (5th Cir 1981)
  • Court assumes arguendo that there was a
    significant disparity in the disciplinary
    treatment of black students and those of other
    races.
  • But, to prevail court finds that plaintiffs
    cannot prove a discriminatory purpose reasoning
    that decisions regarding discipline involve too
    many legitimate, non-racial factors to infer
    discriminatory purpose even in the context of
    desegregation efforts. Discriminatory purpose
    would not be found absent a showing of arbitrary
    disciplinary practices, undeserved or
    unreasonable punishment of black students, or
    failure to discipline white students for similar
    conduct.

12
Defendants prevail through settlement
  • Ross v. Saltmarsh, 520 F.Supp. 935 (S.D.N.Y.
    1980)
  • Consent Decree to eliminate disparities in
    suspension rates by reducing number of
    suspensions, simplifying discipline code to make
    it more understandable to students, development
    of in-school alternatives to suspension, greater
    involvement of tutors and psychologists in
    disciplinary
  • processes, less racial tracking, training in
    race relations and affirmative steps to hire
    minority teachers.
  • Florida Dept. of Education, Technical Assistance
    Paper, No. 013-DP-92
  • See LULAC v. FLA. Bd of Education,
    www//firn.edu/doe/omsle
  • Student conduct may be influenced by cultural
    values which are not adequately understood by
    school personnel and may be mistaken for
    insubordination, insolence or disrespect.

13
STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
  • PRIMARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION

14
Disparate Discipline
  • Among children with disabilities, Latino, Native
    American, and African American children are
    substantially more likely than whites to be
    suspended, removed by school personnel, or
    removed by a hearing officer. For example,
    according to national OSEP data from the
    1999-2000 academic year, African American
    students with disabilities are more likely that
    three times as likely as Whites to be given
    short-term suspensions. Racial disparities are
    nearly as great for long-term suspensions with
    both American Indians (2.72 times) and African
    Americans (2.6 times) more likely to be removed
    for more than ten days. Moreover,
    African-American, Latino, and American Indian
    children with disabilities are each 67 more
    likely than Whites to be removed on grounds of
    dangerousness by a hearing officer.
  • The Civil Rights Project, Harvard U., Civil
    Rights Alerts, Minority Children with
    Disabilities will be harmed in disproportionate
    numbers if Idea's discipline safeguards are
    reduced or eliminated
  • (January 30,2003)

15
FEDERAL LAW
  • Before 1975 many children with disabilities were
    denied any education at all. In 1975, Congress
    passed a law, the Education for the Handicapped
    Act, which confirmed the right of a child with a
    disability to a free, appropriate education. The
    Act was later amended and is now called the
    Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or
    the IDEA.Other federal statutes, such as the
    Rehabilitation Act and The ADA, also protect the
    right of a child with a disability to an
    education free from discrimination based on
    disabilities.
  • Education is primarily the responsibility of
    states and local communities, rather than the
    federal government. For this reason, the federal
    statutes do not require the states to educate any
    children. The Rehabilitation Act instead
    prohibits discrimination against anyone on the
    basis of a disability in any program supported by
    federal funding. Since every state accepts
    federal money for its general education programs,
    every state is forbidden to discriminate against
    a child with a disability in education.
  • California Dept of Justice, Legal Rights of
    Persons with Disabilities (Nov.03) (hereafter
    DOJ)

16
State Law
  • California accepts federal money and is required
    to provide a FAPE. California has also enacted
    statutes which sometimes provide greater
    benefits than federal law. (Ed. Code, Sec. 5600
    et seq.)

17
School Districts May NOT CHANGE a Child's
PLACEMENT Without Parental Notice.
  • A change in placement is a fundamental change in
    the type of special education or related services
    provided to a child with a disability and
    parents are entitled to detailed advance
    notice. (DOJ)
  • Should parents believe that their child is being
    denied a FAPE they are entitled to a hearing
    before an independent hearing officer provided by
    the Ca. Dept of Ed..
  • The U. S. Dept of Ed, Office for Civil Rights,
    OCR, enforces the ADA and Section 504. The
    typical OCR complaint involves an alleged
    violation of FAPE.
  • wwwed.gov/ocr
  • For the differences between IDEA and the
    disability laws enforced by OCR see
  • Anderle, Helping Schools Make the Grade,
    http//www.michbar.org/journal/home.cfm?viewtypea
    rchivevolumeid16

18
A Child with a Disability MAY NOT Be Expelled
  • A short suspension of a child with a disability
    for misbehavior is not a change in placement
    necessitating detailed advance notice. Expulsion,
    however, is a change in placement. Therefore, a
    school district cannot use the procedures used in
    expelling other children in expelling students
    with disabilities. Although a school district can
    change a child with a disabilitys placement if
    the child is disruptive, the school district
    cannot expel a child whose misbehavior is a
    manifestation of , or is caused by, his or her
    disability. Even when a child with a disability
    may properly be expelled, the school district
    cannot refuse to offer some form of education to
    the child. (DOJ)
  • Note that If suspensions are repeated and the
    cumulative amount of time suspended approaches 10
    days, it may constitute a change in placement and
    require complete due process proceedings.

19
Honig v. Doe, 484 U.S. 305 (1988)
  • The present dispute grows out of the efforts of
    certain officials of the SFUSD to expel two
    emotionally disturbed children from school
    indefinitely for violent and disruptive conduct
    related to their disabilities.
  • The language of 1415(e)(3) is unequivocal. It
    states plainly that during the pendency of any
    proceedings initiated under the Act, unless the
    state or local educational agency and the parents
    or guardian of a disabled child agree, the child
    SHALL remain in the then current educational
    placement...Faced with this clear directive,
    petitioner asks us to read a dangerousness
    exception into the stay-put provision on the
    basis of either two essentially inconsistent
    assumptions first, that Congress thought the
    residual authority of school officials to exclude
    dangerous students from the classroom too obvious
    for comment or second, that Congress
    inadvertently failed to provide such authority
    and this Court must therefore remedy the
    oversight. Because we cannot accept either
    premise, we decline petitioners
  • invitation to re-write the statute.

20
Stay Put Under Attack in IDEA Reauthorization
  • Thomas B. Fordham Foundation Report, www
    edexcellence.net
  • Presidents Commission on Educational Excellence
  • IDEA Reauthorized 2004
  • Stay Put provision essentially unchanged

21
Major Changes in IDEA Discipline (see www.
cec.sped.org)
  • IDEA 1997 established the parameters for removing
    disabled students from school when they have
    behavior problems.
  • When disciplining disabled students, a school
    must determine if the behavior was a result of
    the disability before removing them from school.
  • If students are removed from school, their
    services do not cease.
  • 2004
  • Maintained requirement
  • Maintained requirement

22
1997 2004
  • When it was found that the childs behavior was
    not a result of their disability, the educational
    placement didnt change, and services continued.
    The burden was on the school to sure for a change
    of placement.
  • Schools can remove student days for 45 days, no
    questions asked, if they bring a gun, bomb, or
    drugs to schools.
  • When it is found that the childs behavior was
    not a result of their disability, services
    continue, but the educational placement may be
    change. The burden is on the parent to appeal the
    decision.
  • In addition to removal for guns, bombs, and
    drugs. Students can be removed for committing
    serious bodily injury.
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