FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 7, 2014
CONTACT: Associate Professor Emily Chiang, S.J. Quinney College of Law, University of Utah, 801 585-5288 (o), 646 242-0909 (c), emily.chiang@law.utah.edu.
Is Too Much Discipline in Utah Schools Pushing Our Students Out of the Education System?
Salt Lake City – UT, In the first report of its kind in the state, students at the University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law used recently released U.S. Department of Education data to examine school discipline rates in Utah. Their findings indicate that Utah students are being disciplined in extraordinarily high numbers starting in elementary school.
“The over-use of school discipline in our state is making it harder for schools to graduate our students and prepare them to be contributing members of our community. If we want our children to succeed, we are going to have to rethink how and how often we discipline them in our schools,” said Professor Emily Chiang, who directed the research and analysis for the report.
Significant findings in the report include the following:
Students who are suspended even once are more likely to drop out of school, and the Department of Justice reports that nearly 70% of those in prison nationwide dropped out of high school. “There is a better way to make sure our kids stay in school,” says Chiang, “and that is to join the pioneering districts that are reducing the use of discipline by emphasizing personal responsibility and providing positive behavioral interventions and supports.”
The report, titled “From Fingerpaint to Fingerprints: The School-to-Prison Pipeline in Utah,” is available at www.publicpolicyclinic.com.