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Does school suspension correct disruptive behavior?
The findings underscore that suspending students does little to reduce future misbehavior for the disciplined students or their peers, nor did it result in improved academic achievement for peers or perceptions of positive school climate.
How do you deal with disruptive children in school?
Think quickly and act slowly Instead pre-empt the situation and think through the different ways you might respond. In that way you will be completely ready if your lesson is disrupted and will be able to rapidly determine the best course of action. Your response must always be calm and measured.
What is the point of suspension in school?
The point is to help the rest of the student body. The suspension has two benefits: It teaches and warns the student body what can happen to badly behaved students. The suspension gives well behaved students a respite from the disruptive behavior of the suspended student.
What are the dangers of expelling disruptive students from school?
Expelling disruptive students from school is a sensitive issue for both parents and school administrators because punishments that are too severe can backfire. Expulsion might feed right into the student’s original goals of doing something offensive or inappropriate so he doesn’t have to go to school at all.
What happens when a student is expelled from school?
Minor consequences, such as lunch detentions and after-school detentions may not be consequential enough to get a troubled student to alter her disruptive behavior. If a student is responsive to discipline and has positive reinforcements from parents and educators, an expulsion might help her turn over a new leaf.
Why are minority students expelled from school more often?
For a struggling school system, suspension is a quick and cheap way to remove disruptive students from the classroom. It is possible that minority students are expelled more often because they tend to be in public schools that are less well-equipped to deal with problem students.
Are suspensions and expulsions a necessary evil?
The usual argument in favor of suspensions and expulsions is that they are a necessary evil, a tool that teachers can use to minimize the harms that disruptive students inflict on the larger number of striving students, and a way to remove dangerous students from the classroom. This makes intuitive sense.
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