When behavioral infractions occur, punishment alone is not effective.
Not exact matches
You may have had general
behavioral guidelines with consequences for
infractions when you were married.
Armed law enforcement officers are not educators, social workers, or counselors, and overwhelming evidence shows that
when schools involve law enforcement in minor, non-violent
behavioral infractions, students of color are disproportionately impacted.
Armed law enforcement officers are not educators, social workers, or counselors, and overwhelming evidence shows that
when schools involve law enforcement in minor, non-violent
behavioral infractions, students of color are disproportionately impacted.1 In our 2015 policy paper, Climate Change: Creating Safe, Supportive Schools for All Students, E4E - New York members pointed out that there are more police officers than school counselors in New York City schools and called on the NYC Department of Education to turn this shameful number on its head by increasing the amount of school counselors.
It is unconscionable that states, like ours, are allowed to underfund their local school districts annually while somehow investing significant financial resources into the coffers of private enterprise that will suspend students for numerous, sometimes quite minor,
behavioral infractions and may shut their doors suddenly on students
when no longer profitable.