Roger Dickinson |
AB
420 places limits on the use of school discipline for the catch-all category
known as “willful defiance,” which also includes minor school disruption.
Willful defiance accounts for 43% of suspensions issued to California students,
and is the suspension offense category with the most significant racial
disparities. For the next 3.5 years, the law eliminates in-school and
out-of-school suspensions for children in grades K-3 for disruptive behavior currently
captured in Education Code section 48900(k) and bans all expulsions for this
reason. The bill was co-sponsored by Public Counsel, Children Now, Fight Crime
Invest in Kids, and the ACLU of California and supported by a statewide
coalition of organizations.
“In
just a few short years, school discipline reform has become an important
education policy priority in California because the stakes are very high –
research has shown that even one suspension can make it five times more likely
that a child will drop out of school and significantly increase the odds they
will get in trouble and head into our juvenile delinquency system,” said Assm.
Roger Dickinson (D-Sacramento), author of AB 420 and a longtime champion of
positive school discipline in California.
The
signing of AB 420 is the latest in a series of influential local and state
reforms and milestones to reform harsh, disciplinary practices in California in
2014, including:
·
New agreements
between school policing agencies and school districts to limit the filing of
criminal charges and citations against students for minor infractions and
instead refer them to counseling and other support services and put in place
other protections. These agreements are now in place in Los Angeles, Oakland,
Pasadena, and San Francisco Unified School Districts.
· Decisions by a growing number of school boards to go
beyond AB 420 and ban the use of the catch-all category of “willful defiance”
as a cause for suspensions and expulsions and instead rely on the other 24 more
specific rationales for suspension spelled out in the California Education
Code. These policies have been
adopted by San Francisco and Los Angeles (all grades, suspension and
expulsion), Oakland (expulsion), and Azusa Unified School District (phased out
over the next 3 years).
· A first-in-the-nation decision by the California
Commission on Teacher Credentialing to require training in best practices in
classroom management and positive school discipline for new school principals
and administrators.
·
Significant
investments in positive school discipline programs and strategies under the
state’s new Local Control Funding Formula law that includes a new requirement
that schools reduce suspensions and expulsions, develop specific strategies for
doing so, and monitor data as a way of assessing “school climate” and the
quality of the learning environment. Highlights of reforms and
investments include:
o Santa Rosa City School’s Local Control Accountability Plan
(LCAP) includes training for all middle and high school personnel staff
on restorative practices and hiring 10 restorative practice specialists to
address discipline issues and a goal of a 75% reduction in suspensions and
expulsions for Latino students in 3 years.
o Santa Ana Unified’s LCAP includes $4.5 million to
support school and district operations to create welcoming and productive
school environments and to conduct anti-bullying awareness, as well as $1.5
million to for School-wide Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports
training, implementation of restorative justice strategies and instituting
School Climate Oversight Committees at each school that include parents and
students as co-facilitators.
o Azusa Unified ’s LCAP includes the elimination of willful
defiance suspensions over the next three years and implementation of SWPBIS in
all schools by 2015-16 and tracking office discipline referrals.
o Berkeley Unified’s LCAP includes a system to track and
reduce office discipline referrals and fund restorative practices, SWPBIS and
other alternatives at the classroom level.
·
A
sharp decline in suspensions, with a 14.1% decrease in suspensions in the
2012-13 school year and a 27% drop in the last three years, according to
California Department of Education data released in January.
Though
this progress is significant and hopeful, California still suspended 329,142
students in the 2012-13 school year and issued more than 600,000 suspensions,
with 43% being suspended for minor misbehavior and students of color being on
the receiving end of significantly more harsh discipline. In 2012-13,
African-American students made up 6.3 percent of total enrollment, but 16.2
percent of suspensions. Latino students
made up 52.7 percent of total enrollment, but 54.6 percent of suspensions.
White students made up 25.5 percent of total enrollment, but 20.9 percent of
suspensions.
More
reforms are needed in local and state policies, as well as monitoring the
implementation of existing policies and programs. AB 420 includes a
sunset provision in 3.5 years, and statewide coalition partners will be returning
with legislative proposals to expand the protections for students and increase
investments in effective alternatives. California’s coalition of state
and local school discipline reform parents, educators, students, community, law
enforcement, civil rights leaders will continue to work toward:
·
Ending
the use of “willful defiance” suspensions for all students, not just young
children
·
Increased
state funding for positive school discipline approaches including Positive Behavior
Intervention and Restorative Practices
· Promoting best practices in schools, including reforms
in teacher and administrator training,
· Developing stronger Local Control Accountability
Plans that include funding and training for alternative discipline practices
·
Reducing
use of all suspensions for any reason by at least 80% by 2020
California community and
statewide leaders have issued the following statements regarding the passage of
AB 420 and the importance of continuing to build momentum for the state’s
expanding school discipline reform movement.Here is what some of California leaders are saying about AB 420:
“AB 420 is a significant step
forward in California’s school discipline reform movement and sends a clear
message about the importance of creating calm, safe and successful learning
environments where suspension is used only as a last resort. This statewide change is key to understanding
what is needed to improve academic achievement, especially in our lowest
performing schools. Public Counsel will
continue to push hard for further reforms at the state level to ensure that
California is a leader in school discipline approaches that work for our most
vulnerable students and students of color.
It is time we stopped leading the way in supporting unsound education
remedies that remove students from schools to an unsupervised vacation or
worse.”
-Laura Faer, Statewide Education Rights
Director, Public Counsel (co-sponsor, AB 420)
“AB 420 is one step forward to making progress and a beginning for
positive change.”
-Elijah
Smithson, 19, Black Parallel School Board, Zero Tolerance Youth Leadership
Team, Sacramento, CA.
-Karen Junker, School Culture and Climate / 6th Grade Math Teacher, Davidson Middle School, Marin
“It is encouraging to see Governor Brown’s
support of common sense school discipline policies, and AB 420 is just that: an
appropriate, logical approach to address undesirable student behavior that
promotes alternatives to suspension and keeps kids in the classroom and off the
streets. Maintaining safe schools and communities is of course top
priority for all law enforcement agencies, and removing a student from school
may be necessary when safety is at stake. But sending a kid home for minor
misbehavior can make matters worse, resulting in the student falling behind and
potentially ending up out on the streets getting into more trouble. Our
educators are better equipped and trained to deal with minor instances of
disobedience, which leaves law enforcement officials free to handle some of the
more serious issues like violence and drug activity.”
-Adam Christianson,
Stanislaus County Sheriff, and Fight Crime: Invest in Kids California Executive
Committee Member
“This is yet another call for all of
us to change direction, keep all children in all schools, and invest in
restoring our children's sense of purpose despite so many institutions wanting
to throw them away. Parents have known for years that suspending
children, especially the youngest ones, for willful defiance is often a point
of no return, a message that our children are not wanted for who they are.
Over the past ten years, we have begun to chip away at the belief that removing
children of color from school for minor behavior, and leaving them
vulnerable to harm and disconnected from the classroom, somehow improves
our school safety and test scores. Data shows otherwise.
The signing of AB 420 into law by Governor Brown is the result of many
courageous parents and youth envisioning healthy,
thriving communities with schools that afford every child the chance to
grow. We call on all school staff to see this new law as a historic
opportunity to work differently with families and truly preserve public
education.”
-Roslyn Broadnax, Core Parent Leader,
CADRE, South Los Angeles
“Children
Now commends Assemblyman Dickinson for his unwavering
leadership. Much more must be done to improve school climate and
student supports, but AB 420 is a huge victory that protects the learning
environment and will help address the needs of our youngest learners.
Children Now remains committed to improving school climate and student
engagement and we believe AB 420 is a critical step in achieving better
outcomes for children.”
-Ted Lempert, President, Children Now
(co-sponsor, AB 420)
“The
Association of California School Administrators believes prohibiting the
suspension of students in K-3 for willful defiance is consistent with the
intent of the Education Code. We further believe that a student should
only be expelled from school in the most serious of cases. Through our
involvement with AB 420, ACSA has added resources into our professional
development to assist administrators on alternatives to student discipline.”
-Wesley Smith,
Executive Director, Association of California School Administrators
“AB 420
is an important first step toward keeping kids in school by limiting harsh,
exclusionary discipline practices, which
disproportionately affect students of color, LGBTQ students and students with
disabilities. But much more work is
necessary to curb rampant use of this subjective offense and expand the use of
strategies that help students learn from mistakes without pushing them out of
school altogether. We look forward to returning to the legislature when the
bill is up for renewal to push for broader reform.”
-David Sapp, Legal Counsel, ACLU of
California (co-sponsor, AB 420)
“We are glad the governor took a
step in the right direction. We are committed, however, to ending the use of
willful defiance in our schools for all grades and without exception. We look
forward to working with AB 420 supporters—including teachers—to expand the
policy."
– Angela
Glover Blackwell, founder and CEO of PolicyLink, lead coordinator of the
Alliance for Boys and Men of Color
“This bill is a good first step in
changing our school discipline system. It
helps keep students in the classroom whenever possible so they can learn, grow
and prepare for a bright future.”
-Tom Torlakson, State Superintendent of Public
Instruction
“This is the first step to
restorative justice for all youth. We
expect more from California and will keep fighting for more. Thank you to all of the community leaders,
parents and students in Los Angeles and throughout the state who continue to
fight to ensure that all youth stay in school and on track.”
-Monica Garcia, School Board Member, Los
Angeles Unified School District and champion of the Safe and Supportive Schools
Resolution, which ended willful defiance suspensions in LAUSD
“I am thrilled to see that the state
of California it taking responsibility for helping ensure equality. I
want to thank Governor Brown for standing with educators, parents, students,
and civil rights leaders who are dismantling the roots of inequity.”
-Judy Appel, Vice President, Berkeley
Unified School Board
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