Title: Schooling and Crime: Exploring the Links
1Schooling and CrimeExploring the Links
- Troubles of Youth
- Sunday, 02 August 2015
2Lecture Outline
- Theories of Education
- Disengagement and Policy Responses
- Attainment
- Disruption
- Exclusions
- Links to Criminality
- School as Site of Crime/ Crime Prevention in
Schools - Safer Schools Partnerships
- Crime Reduction in Secondary Schools
- Education and Desistance
- Interventions
- Mentoring
- Avoiding Exclusion
3Interpretations of Education
- Education is traditionally cited in positive,
functional terms - Schooling provides skills, morality, social
regulation, social ranking - More critical commentaries
- Education acts to maintain and reproduce social
inequalities - Working class children, Black and female pupils
have roles and expectations matched to
realistically low achievements - For middle class children, education operates to
reproduce culturally dominant modes of behaviour
and achievement - Education perpetuates the myth of meritocracy
4How important is schooling?
- Little independent effect of schooling?
- Schools simply reflect the macro-, or meso- level
effects of wider social order - Schools dont affect individual success /
failure, but represent an arena this is played
out - Bernstein (1970) Schools cannot compensate for
society - Considerable effect?
- Schools provide the critical mix for crime
opportunity - at-risk of victimisation members of society
- high value, sellable property
- motivated offenders
- (possibly) low-levels of effective supervision
- Vital role in the labelling of young people
- Coleman / Jencks (1972)
- more of an independent effect noted, esp. for low
ability pupils from lower social class, or ethnic
minorities
5Disaffection and Trouble in Schools
- Tension between individual needs and that of the
group is apparent throughout the education system - Sources of trouble for children in school
- failure to do their work
- behaviour towards others
- Attendance
- Non-condoned absence
- Condoned absence
6Source Hayden, C et al (2007) Schools, pupil
behaviour and young offenders BRIT. J. CRIMINOL.
Vol 47 pp 293310
7Steer Report (2005)The Practitioners Group on
School Behaviour and Discipline
- It is often the case that for pupils, school is
a calm place in a disorderly world. We realise
that this is not the case in every school, but in
our experience, where unsatisfactory behaviour
does occur, in the vast majority of cases it
involves low-level disruption in lessons.
Incidents of serious misbehaviour, and especially
acts of extreme violence, remain exceptionally
rare and are carried out by a very small
proportion of pupils - some new forms problematic behaviour around new
technology - in loco parentis? a trend for parents to
challenge schools at law. has continued and
intensified
8Links between Schooling and Delinquency
- Strong correlational links between schools
demographic characteristics and delinquency - Farrington and West (1973) suggest this is not a
school effect, but reflects differences in
intake - Rutter (1979) 15000 Hours sig. school
effects in attainment, attendance and behaviour
in school delinquency relatively unaffected by
school - Differences may explain research approach adopted
9Delinquent / Delinquescent Sub-culture
- Mediating factor of group effects
- Numerous studies (Hargreaves (1967) Chambliss
(1973) Willis (1977) Schwedingers (1985)) have
identified oppositional sub-cultures that relate
educational disengagement with delinquency - Over-deterministic?
- Some evidence that delinquent sub-cultures are
affected by streaming, and by school processes
of marginalization
10Disruptive Behaviour -gt Delinquency?
- Objective measurement of disruptive behaviour?
- Criminalisation?
- School problems acting as a net-widener
- Suspended / disruptive pupils deemed more
problematic if they enter the CJS - School reports carry weight with magistrates
11Truancy
Level of Truancy Year 10 and 11(age) Level of Truancy Year 10 and 11(age)
Every Day 1.5
2-4 times a week 3.2
Once a week 3.5
2-3 times a month 5.4
Once a month 4.7
Less Often 12.2
Never 69.5
- Not a straightforward proxy for disaffection
- Often carried out to avoid certain lessons, not a
particular dislike for school - Poor neighbourhood and low-skilled family
increases risk (Galloway 1985) - Absenteeism records a strong predictor of
exclusion
OKeefe (1994) using YCS data
12Truancy and Criminality
- Causal links difficult to establish
- Some find evidence of truancy coinciding with
offending at that stage in life - Little evidence of offending whilst actually
truanting - Once apprehended, truancy appears to be a
significant factor in decisions made by police
and the courts
13Crime Reduction in Secondary Schools
- Key Factors in Enhancing Life Chances and
preventing offending - Good quality staff / pupil relationships
- Importance of recognising parental / carers
roles - Commitment to implementation across the whole
school - Integration of measures into wider practices
14Exclusions and Offending
Evidence of a close link between exclusions and
juvenile custodial population?
15The independent effects of permanent exclusion
from school on the offending careers of young
peopleDavid Berridge et al (2001)
- Aim to establish whether permanent exclusion
from school had an independent effect on
offending career - Research Problems
- official data retrospective informal
practices theoretical problem
16Findings
No recorded offences at all 85 (32.3)
Only recorded offences after exclusion 117 (44.4)
Offences before and after exclusion 47 (17.9)
Only offences before exclusion 14 (5.3)
Total number of excluded pupils 263 cases
A solution - Older boys
Offending after exclusion Offending after exclusion
Total 168
Offending intensified at time of exclusion 13
a complex chain of events loosening affiliation and commitment to a conventional way of life loss of time structures a re-casting of identity a changed relationship with parents and siblings the erosion of contact with pro-social peers and adults closer association with similarly situated young people and heightened vulnerability to police surveillance. a complex chain of events loosening affiliation and commitment to a conventional way of life loss of time structures a re-casting of identity a changed relationship with parents and siblings the erosion of contact with pro-social peers and adults closer association with similarly situated young people and heightened vulnerability to police surveillance.
17Findings (2)
- Substantial majority of excluded pupils were
involved in crime - Substantial majority of young people involved in
crime had been excluded from school - Other non-school risk (personality and
socio-demographic) risk-factors also present - Transition to secondary school problematic for
many - Black African-Caribbean students greater teacher
apprehension - Permanent exclusions usually the end of a lengthy
process of warnings and fixed-term exclusions
little planning for post-exclusion care, though
18What Works? Educational Interventions
- Education
- metrics-rich enabling a strong evidence oriented
culture however, - Treatment much more difficult to measure than
outcomes - Need to consider varying inputs social
background etc. - Claims to effects beyond education probably the
result of complex intermediary stages
19Educational Interventions examples
- Increased Parental Involvement in Education
- (Spontaneous) large effects on educational
achievement - (Planned) little evidence
- Pre-school education
- Promising, incl. extra-educational metrics
- School Improvement Teams
20Addressing Disaffection
- Learning Support Units / Pupil Referral Units
- Net-widening / variation in practice / formation
of delinquent peer groups - Mentoring e.g. Mentoring-Plus
- Central role of the relationship between mentor
and young person - Positive impact most marked in relation to
education / work no evidence of effect on
offending, family relationships, substance use
and self-esteem
21Responses to Disruptive Behaviour
- Level 1 Whole school strategies
- Policies and strategies
- Behaviour bullying Equal Opps SEN provision,
teaching and learning strategies - Agreements
- Home-school agreements
- Individual pupils
- Educational targets behavioural expectations
Individual Behaviour Plans, Pastoral Support
Plans Personal Education Plans - The curriculum
- PSHE citizenship education teaching and
learning strategies - Levels 2 In-school and more intensive support
(patchy provision) - Withdrawal rooms or Leaning Support Units group
and individual work learning mentors - Level 3 Combination and reintegration programmes
and plans (patchy provision) - Part-time at school part-time at an FE college,
sometimes with a view to reintegration Include
programmes - Level 4 Out of School provision
- Pupil Referral Units, home tuition, residential
placements - Source Hayden, C. (2005) Children in Trouble,
Palgrave
22Education and Delinquency
- Safer Schools Partnerships
- Evidence of some improvement in attainment and
attendance - Institutional reluctance to adopt
- Custodial Education
- Effectiveness difficult to establish
- Self-selection bias cross programme
contamination lack of effective follow-ups - Remains overwhelming evidence of the poor
educational experiences of those in youth
custody, and of the inadequacy of educational
provision once in custody