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Caste and control in schools: A systematic review of the pathways, rates and correlates of exclusion due to school discipline

In recent decades, school discipline policies and practices in K-12 education resulting in school exclusion have garnered substantial attention and represent an important challenge with significant policy and equity implications. Given the central role that school exclusion plays in discipline polic...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Children and youth services review 2018-11, Vol.94, p.315-339
Main Authors: Welsh, Richard O., Little, Shafiqua
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In recent decades, school discipline policies and practices in K-12 education resulting in school exclusion have garnered substantial attention and represent an important challenge with significant policy and equity implications. Given the central role that school exclusion plays in discipline policies and practices, it is important to critically assess the pathways, rates, and harms associated with school exclusion. This study provides a systematic review of the interdisciplinary literature on the relationship between school exclusion and students' short- and long-term educational and life outcomes. Although there are a handful of possible pathways, the most frequent pathway though which school discipline results in school exclusion are suspensions. The results of this systematic review indicate that school exclusion is not an efficacious response to student misbehavior given the short and long term correlates with negative student educational and life outcomes. There are several plausible mechanisms through which school exclusion may affect student outcomes but there is little empirical evidence on these mechanisms. •Suspensions are the most frequent pathway through which school discipline results in school exclusion.•Students receive exclusionary discipline for low- (e.g., tardiness) and high- (e.g., fighting) level offenses.•African Americans experience the highest rates of school exclusion and males are excluded at higher rates than females.•There is little evidence on the mechanisms through which exclusion may affect student outcomes or school exclusion effects.•School exclusion is not an effective response to misbehavior given the correlates to negative educational and life outcomes
ISSN:0190-7409
1873-7765
DOI:10.1016/j.childyouth.2018.09.031