人兽性交

Skip to main content Accessibility

Teaching Tolerance magazine examines school-to-prison pipeline, offers tips to keep students out of criminal justice system

As schools have adopted discipline policies that favor incarceration over education, children of color and children with disabilities are bearing the brunt of these policies at alarming rates, a trend that teachers can change, according to the new issue of Teaching Tolerance magazine, released today by the 人兽性交鈥檚 Teaching Tolerance project.

As schools have adopted discipline policies that favor incarceration over education, children of color and children with disabilities are bearing the brunt of these policies at alarming rates, a trend that teachers can change, according to the new issue of Teaching Tolerance magazine, released today by the 人兽性交鈥檚 Teaching Tolerance project.

The cover story of the Spring 2013 issue 鈥 鈥淭he School-to-Prison Pipeline鈥 鈥 examines these policies and how a teacher鈥檚 daily decisions can help prevent students from being pushed into the criminal justice system. It also offers several scenarios that show how a teacher can effectively respond to a discipline problem in class without it leading to a needless arrest.

鈥淭hough administrators, social workers and school safety officers often respond to school discipline problems, it鈥檚 the classroom teacher who spends the most time with students,鈥 said Teaching Tolerance Director Maureen Costello. 鈥淎 teacher who has the support of her principal and uses a human development approach to manage behavior is critical in keeping a student out of the school-to-prison pipeline.鈥

The Spring issue of Teaching Tolerance can be viewed . A new is also available.


Issue 43 of Teaching Tolerance magazine

Though data show African-American students are 18 percent of the nation鈥檚 students, they account for 46 percent of students suspended more than once. One report found that while 8.6 percent of public school children have been identified as having disabilities that affect their ability to learn, these students make up 32 percent of youths in juvenile detention centers.

Teaching Tolerance also examines how modern-day freedom schools are working to end this trend. 鈥淣o School Like Freedom School鈥 describes how these schools 鈥 modeled after the original 1964 Mississippi Freedom Schools founded to help communities develop leaders and exercise political power 鈥 are educating and empowering students today.

Other articles examine the unintended consequences of school uniforms; challenging language prejudice in the classroom; and protecting the religious freedom of students participating in extracurricular athletic activities.

Teaching Tolerance magazine, issued three times a year, is the nation鈥檚 leading journal serving educators on diversity issues. It is distributed free of charge to more than 450,000 educators nationwide.