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Law, Legal Consciousness and Student Discipline

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How have legal cases over school discipline changed over time? ... Disciplinary practice (Corporal punishment, Expulsion, Suspension, Search and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Law, Legal Consciousness and Student Discipline


1
Law, Legal Consciousness and Student Discipline
  • Common Good Class Disrupted Forum
  • Richard Arum
  • October 2007

2
Key Policy Questions
  • How have legal cases over school discipline
    changed over time?
  • How has law affected school practices and been
    understood by students, teachers and
    administrators?
  • What effects has this had on moral authority,
    youth socialization and student achievement?

3
Sources
  • School Rights Project Arum, Edelman, Morrill and
    Tyson surveys, interviews and ethnographies in 24
    high schools AEMT
  • Legal Ambiguity and Case Decisions Beattie,
    Arum and Roksa analysis of school discipline
    court cases extended through 2002 BAR
  • Disparate Impact of Adversarial Legalism Arum
    and Velez reanalysis of 2003-04 Harris survey
    data of public school teachers and administrators
    AV
  • Judging School Discipline (HUP, 2003) with
    Beattie, Pitt, Thompson and Way JSD

4
Landmark Supreme Court cases (1967-75)
  • In re Gault (1967) Granting of procedural
    rights to youth in juvenile courts prelude to
    expansion of student rights.
  • Tinker (1968) Granting of free speech rights to
    students. Students suspended for wearing
    arm-bands protesting the Vietnam War.
  • Goss v. Lopez (1975) Granting of rudimentary due
    process rights to students facing even minor
    public school discipline. Students suspended for
    ten days without due process for involvement in
    disruptive school protests.
  • Wood v. Strickland (1975) Establishes liability
    for public officials knowingly and willingly
    violating student due process rights. Students
    sue administrators and board members over being
    expelled for spiking the punch at a Home
    Economics extra-curricular school event.

JSD
5
School discipline court case data
  • 11,291 state and federal appellate cases
    1945-2002 (collected from LEXIS-NEXIS)
  • 1,976 relevant cases cases involving students
    contesting the rights of schools to discipline
    and control students (excluding pure free speech
    and teacher dismissal cases)
  • Content-coding of relevant cases (94 inter-coder
    reliability)
  • Individual characteristics (Gender or race
    identified alleged gender or racial
    discrimination)
  • School characteristics (Sector, Grade-level)
  • Disciplinary practice (Corporal punishment,
    Expulsion, Suspension, Search and seizure, School
    transfer)
  • Type of Student Misbehavior (Drugs, Alcohol,
    Violence/Weapons, Political Protest, Free
    expression)
  • Direction of court-decision - social (not legal)
    meaning Pro-school, Ambiguous, Pro-student

BAR
6
BAR
7
BAR
8
2000-02 court cases and school characteristics
(CCD 2001-02 data)
Note Differences statistically significant
(plt.05) U.S. Secondary School sample weighted by
school-size.
BAR
9
Courts decisions and perception of school
discipline
JSD
10
School Rights Project Survey Data
  • School Rights Project questionnaire on perceived
    legal rights, fairness of school discipline,
    mobilization of law, social background,
    individual experiences and school behavior.
  • 5,092 students and 310 teachers and
    administrators in 24 high schools (NC, NY, CA)

AEMT
11
Rights Consciousness in Schools
AEMT
12
Student perceptions of legal entitlements and
fairness of school discipline
AEMT
13
Perceptions of rights, discipline and student
educational commitment
AEMT
14
National Probability Teacher Survey Data
  • Harris Interactive survey of law and education
    national probability sample of 600 public school
    teachers and administrators with school level
    identifiers (AY 2003-04).
  • U.S. Department of Education Common Core of Data
    file on school-level characteristics (AY
    2001-02).
  • Merged dataset with non-missing data includes 330
    teachers and 269 principals.
  • Measures of educators personal contact with suit
    or legal challenge from student or parent and
    fear of legal challenge.

AV
15
Educators experience of legal challenge
AV
16
Educator Fear of Legal Challenge IndexTo what
extent does fear of legal challenge affect your
willingness or ability to
  • Teachers (participate in extracurricular
    activities comfort or console students maintain
    order in the classroom give honest and candid
    evaluations of students deal with unreasonable
    demands by parentscreate a good learning
    environment.
  • Administrators (fire a bad teacher deal with
    unreasonable demands by parents deal with
    student discipline create a good learning
    environment try new reforms or ideas maintain
    order in your school)

AV
17
Educators fear of legal challenge
Controlling for school characteristics (percent
poor, school size, elementary/secondary, region)
and individual characteristics (gender, race,
age, educational work experience, educational
attainment).
AV
18
Conclusion
  • Increasing school discipline litigation over time
  • Successful litigation and increased sense of
    legal entitlements associated with decrease in
    school discipline, declining moral authority of
    educators and lower educational performance.
  • Effects of adversarial legalism have exacerbated
    existing social inequalities in schools.
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