Latest Student Included in “School to Prison Pipeline”
Earlier this year I heard what I thought
was great news, the president mandated that all schools receiving federal
funding (most schools) will be ‘encourage decriminalizing school infractions’.
What I meant by that was that now schools have a guideline to follow so
students won’t suffer by being overly disciplined or disciplined unfairly
amongst their peers. There are plenty of reports and statistics that have
proven and driven for such policy changes, especially as it pertains to racial
discrimination, but overall all students suffer. Those who are directly
subjected and otherwise are all affected in such acts for it creates a feeling
of inferiority among classes in the student body which in turn cases
segregation that can lead to such politics regarding race. Many critics have
come under fire of the Obama administration for the ‘guidelines’ they've set
saying that it is racist because the guide post for leading the legislation is
that there are more blacks in jail than whites, and that for his entire
presidency he’s been overly zealous in his attempt to change the country; he doesn't help to elevate the poor and underachieved but to take from those of the
high end of the economic scale.
Despite the opinions and feelings of
others another incident involving a high school senior, a Caucasian male,
proves that these infractions are truly costly to the futures of the students
incurring them and that something needs to be done.
Jordan Wiser, a student at Ashtabula
County Technical School in Jefferson, Ohio was expelled from school after a
search of his car turned up a folding pocket knife in a jacket/vest, both used
for EMT training. Because of his schools ‘Zero Tolerance’ policy Wiser was referred
to the police department and expelled from school. Fox News reported that the
school district is obligated to motion for expulsion once a student is found
with banned items on campus. School officials reported that it was the decision
of the police and prosecutors to charge Wiser with illegal conveyance of a
weapon for having the knife which leads to him spending thirteen days in jail.
School officials maintain that he search
was prompted after viewing Wiser’s YouTube page,
but the videos posted are not of violently graphic, or horrific scenes; Jordan
is there teaching the world how to wield the knife, yet he was expelled from
school for it. As detailed on his YouTube page it is Jordan’s aspiration to
join the Army and serve his country. Now his aspirations are to finish high
school over an online program, rather than in the comfort of a classroom filled
with his peers. For Jordan Wiser and all other students like him, the school to
prison pipeline is very real and swift.
Regardless,
the school to prison pipeline is a very real, very dangerous policy which educational
administrators have practically built with their use of ‘zero tolerance’
policies and all students, regardless of their racial disparity are victims,
once entering the system. The ACLU
defines the ‘school
to prison pipeline’ as follows;
“A
disturbing national trend wherein children are funneled out of public schools
and into the juvenile and criminal justice systems. Many of these children have
learning disabilities or histories of poverty, abuse or neglect, and would
benefit from additional educational and counseling services. Instead, they are
isolated, punished and pushed out.”
“The
“school-to-prison pipeline” refers to the policies and practices that push our
nation’s schoolchildren, especially our most at-risk children, out of
classrooms and into the juvenile and criminal justice systems. This pipeline reflects the prioritization of
incarceration over education.”
Because of such incidents growing in
numbers over the past years all over the nation the Obama administration has
urged schools and administrators to amend zero tolerance policies, and school
discipline procedures so that school infractions remain a school problem. The
call for such action has been ridiculed as being slightly racist, but
statistics have proven that minorities (black, Spanish, ELL’s, Special Needs,
etc.) are those mostly affected by the strict disciplinary actions, and they
are also among those who are falling behind. Within the ‘guidance package’
created by the administration to detour such infractions includes federal
initiatives that coincide with school discipline as well as resources along
with the
guidelines.
I
urge parents as well as teachers and administrators to ‘push’ for integration
and adaption of these guidelines. We, as a nation, only seem to take note of
injustice ‘after’ the fact; its high time we step up to the plate and start
making the hard decisions that will lead to better lives. By voicing our
opinions, norms, and values we can help to steer school disciplinary
infractions as we have fought for equality in education and even the
abolishment of segregation.
The school to prison pipeline isn’t biased;
it also has a zero tolerance policy.
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