1975
DOI: 10.2307/1191106
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Suspension and Expulsion of Black Students from the Public Schools: Academic Capital Punishment and the Constitution

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Cited by 22 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The fact that African-American students experience a significantly higher rate of school suspension than do whites (Hahn and Danzberger 1987;Yudof 1975), as well as a higher dropout rate, underscores the importance of looking at disciplinary procedures. Recent findings seem to refute charges of racism in the use of suspension, but research in other institutional settings gives us reason to remain skeptical.…”
Section: Discipline and Dropoutmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fact that African-American students experience a significantly higher rate of school suspension than do whites (Hahn and Danzberger 1987;Yudof 1975), as well as a higher dropout rate, underscores the importance of looking at disciplinary procedures. Recent findings seem to refute charges of racism in the use of suspension, but research in other institutional settings gives us reason to remain skeptical.…”
Section: Discipline and Dropoutmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the role of behaviour in school exclusion, research suggests that it is not the sole or even the most prominent predictor. In fact, previous findings show a more complex scenario where exclusion is also strongly predicted by gender, ethnicity, age, economic background, and special educational needs (Costenbader & Markson, 1998a; Mcloughlin & Noltemeyer, 2010; Monroe, 2005; Nickerson & Spears, 2007; Noltemeyer & Mcloughlin, 2010; Skiba et al, 2011; Yudof, 1975). In the following paragraphs, we offer an overview of the role of these variables in predicting school exclusion.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Despite the role of behaviour in school exclusion described above, research from the last 40 years suggests that it is not the unique or even the most prominent predictor. In fact, previous findings illustrate a more complex scenario where exclusion is disproportionately predicted by gender, ethnicity, age, economic background and special education needs (Yudof, 1975; Costenbader & Markson, 1998; Monroe, 2005; Nickerson & Spears, 2007; Noltemeyer & Mcloughlin, 2010; Mcloughlin & Noltemeyer, 2010; Skiba, Horner, May, & Tobin, 2011). In the following paragraphs we offer an overview of the role of these variables in predicting school exclusion.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%