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Young Students in Majority Black Charleston Schools Face Greater Suspensions

Stark racial disparities in harsh discipline found in a comparison study of South Carolina district鈥檚 elementary schools that include pre-K programs.

Of the 42 Charleston elementary schools with pre-K programs looked at by researchers, 54% had a majority white enrollment while 25% had a majority Black student population. The graphic shows that the percentage of harsh disciplinary incidents are disproportionately represented by the predominantly Black schools. Note: percentages do not sum to 100% because not all schools in CCSD have a majority of either Black or white students.

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Young learners attending predominantly Black schools in the Charleston County School District were far more likely to face suspension and expulsion than students in the South Carolina district鈥檚 predominantly white pre-K and elementary schools, a new study shows. 

The released by ImpactSTATS, Inc. and The BEE Collective used National Center for Education Statistics data to compare how often students were being excluded from school as a disciplinary measure at predominantly white versus Black Charleston schools in the 2022-23 school year.

To zero in on the treatment of young students, researchers considered only those schools that offered pre-kindergarten programs. Of the 42 schools in the study, 33 encompassed grades pre-K through 5; six went from pre-K to grade 8; two were pre-K to kindergarten and one school taught pre-K to second grade.

Of those schools, the ones with more than a 51% Black student population isolated children from learning settings for disciplinary reasons at a rate of 98.2 removals per 1,000 students, according to the report. This was seven times greater than the 14.1 removals per 1,000 students at majority white early-grade and elementary schools 鈥 and more than double the districtwide rate of 42.7 per 1,000 students.

Exclusionary discipline could include in-school or out-of-school suspensions and expulsion. When looking just at out-of-school suspensions in Charleston, the racial disparity by school population soared, according to the study released earlier this summer.

Students in majority Black schools faced out-of-school suspension rates of 78.8 per 1,000 students in the 2022-23 school year compared to 11.9 suspensions per 1,000 students for those in predominantly white schools. 

The districtwide rate was 34.8 suspensions per 1,000 students. 

鈥淭his tells us that we have a problem and it鈥檚 not children鈥檚 behavior 鈥 but adult action and adult decisions,鈥 said lead researcher Melodie Baker. 

Charleston public schools served 50,312 students at the end of the last school year: 24,978 were white, 14,291 were Black and 7,916 were Hispanic, according to the district. 

Baker said removing a child from a classroom or isolating them from their teachers and peers robs them of an opportunity to learn self-regulation and is particularly damaging to the youngest learners.

鈥淚t makes kids feel like they don鈥檛 belong,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey feel ashamed. They feel confused. It affects their overall development.鈥

The practice is seen as : and are among the states that have banned or strictly limited such removals in the early grades.

Charleston County School District spokesman Andrew Pruitt last week pushed back against the study, which raises issues of racism and implicit bias, noting its data does not include the ages of the suspended students or the reasons why they were punished. 

“We take any report that raises concerns about unconscious bias negatively impacting our children seriously. However, we are incredibly concerned that a specific claim of that magnitude was made in the absence of an analysis of the appropriate and relevant data,鈥 he said in a statement. 

The district didn鈥檛 start breaking down its disciplinary data by grade until recently, according to Pruitt. Though records were limited, he cited a total of 49 preschool suspensions in Charleston public schools in the 2022-23 school year. He did not separate that number by race.

Preschoolers across the U.S. are expelled at rates than K-12 students. South Carolina in preschool suspensions by a large margin in 2017-18 with 438 preschoolers suspended, according to the most recent available federal data. 

Those numbers have grown significantly worse in the Palmetto State and were a critical focus of . The Joint Citizens and Legislative Committee on Children showing 928 South Carolina public preschoolers received in-school and out-of-school suspensions in 2023-24; 66% of those 3- and 4-year-olds were children of color and 77% were boys.

The committee鈥檚 data for Charleston County schools, the state鈥檚 second-largest district, cites that 25 preschoolers received out-of-school suspensions in 2023-24 and fewer than five received an in-school suspension. Eighteen Black Charleston County public preschoolers received an out鈥搊f-school suspension and fewer than five white students did. Twenty-one male preschoolers received an out-of-school suspension that year and fewer than five female preschoolers did. Six preschoolers classified as special education students were among those removed from school for disciplinary reasons.

The Charleston County School District has taken steps to address systemic inequalities in discipline, Pruitt said, including professional development training for all its early education teachers that focuses on how to appropriately respond to student behavior while taking into account young learners鈥 social-emotional well-being. He said the district continues to work with early childhood education organizations throughout the state to adopt best practices.

The report by ImpactSTATS and The BEE Collective notes citing the role of educator bias in harsh discipline, including perceptions of Black children as being older than they are, less innocent, more aggressive and more deserving of punishment for the same behavior displayed by white students.

New York-based was founded by Baker in 2023 to bring more diversity to the research field and to provide technical support and research assistance to grass-roots groups working with underserved communities of color. 

Members of South Carolina鈥檚 BEE Collective (The BEE Collective)

The BEE 鈥 Beloved Early Education and Care 鈥 Collective is that partly funded the study and collaborated on the research. It seeks to improve maternal and child health in South Carolina鈥檚 Lowcountry, including in addressing racism and implicit bias in early child care. 

Black children across all grade levels and those with disabilities have long faced higher rates of exclusionary disciplines than other student groups. According to analyzing data from the 2020-21 school year, Black boys were nearly two times more likely than white boys to receive an out-of-school suspension or an expulsion.

鈥淚t’s mostly boys who are being suspended 鈥 mostly for rough-and-tumble play,鈥 Baker said, speaking anecdotally of the Charleston suspensions after interviewing those who worked with or observed district students. 鈥淏ut there’s a lot of research out there that talks about the positives of rough-and-tumble play. Males tend to perceive that very differently.鈥

Of Charleston County schools鈥 3,673 teachers in the 2021-22 school year, roughly 2,402 were white females, 556 were white males, 404 were Black females and 103 were Black males, according to .

Cara Kelly, a researcher who observed classrooms within the Charleston district for seven years, ending in 2019, recalled several instances where kindergarten children were made to sit alone and in silence for 30 minutes or more for minor infractions such as talking to other students, calling out while a teacher was speaking or standing up when they were supposed to sit for long stretches of time. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 OK to give a child five minutes to calm down 鈥 but not to be completely excluded,鈥 she said. 

Kelly, now a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Oklahoma鈥檚 Early Childhood Education Institute, told 麻豆精品 she believed the punishments were not developmentally appropriate and often targeted Black children. 

The report recommends the district recruit more male teachers in the early grades, increase pay for all early childhood educators, decrease student-to-staff ratios and raise awareness about discipline reform legislation that seeks to prohibit suspensions, expulsions and corporal punishment while promoting more effective means of managing student behavior. 

Researchers acknowledge that the report, funded partly by the American Heart Association Voices for Healthy Kids, should be interpreted cautiously because of the data鈥檚 limitations regarding race and age.

The BEE Collective has filed a public records request asking the Charleston district to release the suspension records for children 5 and under for the last five years broken down by age, race, gender and school. Noting that the response to that Freedom of Information request is due Aug. 31, Pruitt said it was 鈥渦nfortunate鈥 that the groups moved ahead with publishing the report without that information in hand. 

Tawanna R. Jennings, an infant and early childhood mental health consultant for South Carolina鈥檚 Partners for Early Attuned Relationships Network, called the study鈥檚 findings 鈥減retty astounding,鈥 adding she hopes the results will be shared widely and that Charleston teachers receive better training and greater support.

鈥淭here needs to be more resources so that [teachers] can understand these behaviors,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ow do you teach these children and how do you be empathetic with what they may be experiencing?鈥

Disclosure: The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation provides financial support to ImpactSTATS and to 麻豆精品.

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