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A MultiState Analysis of High School Discipline Policies

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Codes of Conduct Mandated by the No Child Left Behind Act ... Rose Maltese. Sara Golomb. Lauren McArdle. Rockeya Wilson. Rachel Schienfield. Series of Studies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A MultiState Analysis of High School Discipline Policies


1
A Multi-State Analysis of High School Discipline
Policies
  • Pam Fenning, Amy Horwitz, and Lauren McArdle
  • Loyola University Chicago

2
Why Study Discipline Policies?
  • Codes of Conduct Mandated by the No Child Left
    Behind Act
  • Found in Virtually Every School
  • Are Based Primarily on Punitive Procedures
    (Suspension and Expulsion) (Fenning et al., in
    press)

3
Suspension and Expulsion
  • Negatively Associated With
  • Academic Achievement (Morrison DIncau, 1997)
  • Attendance (Wald Losen, 2003)
  • Positive Associated With
  • Dropout
  • Entry to Prison (School to Prison Pipeline)
    (Wald Losen, 2003)

4
Suspension and Expulsion
  • Impacts our Most Vulnerable Students
  • Students of Color Primarily African-American
    Males (Skiba Rausch, 2006 Skiba et al., 2000)
  • Students with Academic Problems (Morrison
    DIncau)

5
Rationale for Studying Discipline Policies
  • Discipline Codes of Conduct are Punitive (Fenning
    et al., 2008 Fenning Bohanon, 2006)
  • Punitive Responses have Negative Effects
    Previously Outlined

6
Current Ongoing Work
  • Loyola University Discipline Policy Research Team
  • Pam Fenning
  • Vivian Gordon
  • Taylor Morello
  • Amy Horwitz
  • Rose Maltese
  • Sara Golomb
  • Lauren McArdle
  • Rockeya Wilson
  • Rachel Schienfield

7
Series of Studies
  • Illinois-Based Study
  • Preliminary Multi-State Study
  • Current Multi-State Study

8
Illinois Project
  • Content Analysis of Discipline Codes of Conduct
  • 64 Illinois High School Discipline Codes Gathered
    in 2004
  • Created a Coding System (the Analysis of
    Discipline Codes Rating Form)

9
Behaviors Categorization
  • Behaviors Categorized as Mild, Moderate and
    Severe, based on
  • Researchers Ratings
  • Judgmental Validity Based on Ratings of Outside
    Experts
  • Deferral to Outside Raters When they Concurred at
    a Rate of 70 or Higher
  • Change in Three Behaviors (Derogatory Remarks to
    Students, Misuse of Fire Alarm and Vandalism)

10
Categorization of Behaviors
  • MILD BEHAVIORS
  • Class Disruption
  • Cheating/Plagiarism
  • Staff Remarks
  • Dress Code Violation
  • Electronic Devices
  • Forgery
  • General Staff Disrespect
  • General Student Disrespect
  • Loitering
  • Misuse of Computer
  • Student ID Violation
  • Tardies
  • Tobacco Offenses (Distribution, Possession,
    Sale, and Use)
  • Truancy

11
Categorization of Behaviors
  • MODERATE BEHAVIORS
  • Bullying
  • Fighting
  • Intimidation
  • Social Exclusion
  • Student Remarks
  • Vandalism

12
Categorization of Behaviors
  • SEVERE BEHAVIORS
  • Alcohol Offenses (Distribution, Possession,
    Sale, and Use)
  • Arson
  • Assault/Threat
  • Battery
  • Bomb Threat
  • Drug Offenses (Distribution, Possession, Sale,
    and Use)
  • Gang Behavior
  • Hazing
  • Misuse of Fire Alarm
  • Fireworks/Explosives Offenses
  • Racial Slurs
  • Sexual Harassment
  • Theft/Burglary
  • Weapons Offenses (Distribution, Possession,
    Sale, and Use)

13
Responses in Policy
  • Proactive Directly taught expected behaviors
    aligned with principles of positive behavior
    support (Sugai et al., 1999)
  • Reactive Punitive in nature without any direct
    teaching (e.g. suspension or expulsion)

14
Proactive Consequences
  • Two Types Calculated
  • Global (general) teacher conference, parent
    conference, natural consequence, community
    service
  • Teaching (direct teaching)peer mediation,
    skill building, substance abuse intervention

15
Reactionary Consequences
  • Mild Detention, Saturday Detention
  • Moderate In-school Suspension, Classroom Removal
  • SevereOut-of school Suspension, Expulsion,
    Alternative School Placement, Police Involvement

16
School Consequences IllinoisSelected Behaviors
17
Initial Multi-State Study
  • Follow-up Study in Multiple-States
  • Sent Mailing in 2006 Asking for Policies as Well
    as Data About Primary, Secondary and Tertiary
    Interventions
  • Poor Response Rate
  • Usable Data from 16 Schools
  • Next Steps

18
Current Multi-State Study
  • Approached IRB Seek Publicly Available Data
    Discipline Policies and Schoolwide Academic Data
  • They said, Yes

19
Sampled from Statewide Data-Base
  • SIX STATES
  • Illinois
  • Georgia
  • Texas
  • Oregon
  • New York
  • Iowa

20
Representative Sample
  • Sampled 20 Schools From Each State
  • Of the 20 Schools
  • 10 Urban
  • 10 Rural
  • Discipline Codes of Conduct Pulled from Each
    Schools Publicly Available Web-Site
  • When Available, Schoolwide Behavioral and
    Academic (NCLB data) pulled/will be Pulled

21
Reliability Analysis
  • Reliability for Raters New to the Project (.80 or
    higher).
  • Previous Reliability Established for One of the
    Raters in previous Ilinois Study

22
Coding of Policies
  • Used Analysis of Discipline Codes Rating System
    (ADCR)
  • Made Slight Modifications (electronic devices
    collapsed existence of corporal punishment was
    added)

23
Slight Changes to Categorization of Behaviors
  • MILD BEHAVIORS
  • Class/School Disruption Combined
  • Cheating/Plagarism/Forgery added
  • Staff Remarks Part of General Staff Disrespect
  • General Student Disrespect Eliminated
  • Profanity/Swearing/Obscene Language/Student
    Remarks Combined

24
Slight Changes to Categorization of Behaviors
  • MODERATE BEHAVIORS
  • Intimidation/Hazing/General Harassment/Negative
    Verbalization Combined
  • Hazing Moved from Severe Category to Join
    Intimidation

25
Results
  • Examined Selected Behaviors and Consequences as
    Previous Illinois Study
  • Descriptive Statistics for Entire Sample
  • Descriptive Statistics by State
  • Descriptive Statistics for Corporal Punishment

26
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27
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28
Descriptive Statistics for Each State
  • Illinois
  • Iowa
  • Oregon
  • New York
  • Georgia
  • Texas

29
School Consequences IllinoisMulti-State Study
30
School Consequences IowaMulti-State Study
31
School Consequences OregonMulti-State Study
32
School Consequences New YorkMulti-State Study
33
School Consequences GeorgiaMulti-State Study
34
School Consequences TexasMulti-State Study
35
Corporal Punishment in Policies
36
Implications
  • Policies Matter! (Osher, 1996)
  • Critical to a schoolwide system of behavioral
    support are written policies that matches a
    proactive stance on the direct teaching of
    behaviors
  • Particular critical is differentiating responses
    for behaviors characterized as minor (e.g.
    tardies) and those which are more severe and tied
    to school safety

37
More Work to be Done
  • Examining Discipline Policies and Directing
    Alternatives to Punitive Practices that Do not
    Work
  • Integrating Evidence-Based Procedures into
    Written Policies (e.g. Schoolwide Positive
    Behavior Support) (Sugai Horner, 2007)
    www.pbis.org

38
Ongoing Works
  • Article Based on Study 1
  • Fenning, P., Golomb, S., Gordon, V., Kelly, M.,
    Scheinfield, R. Banull, C. et al. (2008) Written
    discipline policies used by administrators Do we
    have sufficient tools of the trade? Journal of
    School Violence.

39
Other Resources
  • Fenning, P. Bohanon-Edmonson, H. (2006).
    Schoolwide discipline policies. in Evertson, C.
    Weinstein, C.S. (Eds). Handbook of Behavior
    Management Research, Practice and Contemporary
    Issues. Lawrence Erlbaum.
  • Fenning, P., Theodos, J., Benner, C.
    Bohanon-Edmonson (2004). Integrating proactive
    discipline practices into codes of conduct.
    Journal of School Violence 3(1), 45-61.
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