The Department of Education's Obama-Era Initiative on Racial Disparities in School Discipline: Wrong For Students and Teachers, Wrong on the Law

Gail L. Heriot, A. Somin
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

On March 8, 2010, one year into the Obama Administration, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan gave a passionate speech in which he asserted (correctly) that African-American students are the subjects of school discipline at higher rates than white students. Although he did not mention it, it is also true that white students are the subjects of school discipline at higher rates than Asian American students and that male students are disciplined at higher rates than female students. In response to the racial disparity he identified, Duncan promised that the Department of Education would be stepping up its enforcement of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In the years that followed, the Department of Education made good on that promise by opening numerous investigations based on statistical disparities. On January 18, 2014, the Department of Education and the Department of Justice jointly issued a “Dear Colleague Letter” on school discipline in which they asserted that the law prohibits not only actual discrimination in discipline on the basis of race, but also what they called “unjustified” disparate impact. In Part I of this article, we point out that there are two sides to the “disparate impact” coin. The Department of Education has focused only upon the fact that, as a group, African-American students are suspended and expelled more often than other students. By failing to consider the other side of the coin — that African-American students may be disproportionately victimized by disorderly classrooms — its policy threatens to do more harm than good even for the group Secretary Duncan was trying to help. In Part II, we discuss the Department of Education’s enforcement policy toward school discipline in greater detail, its over-reliance on racial disparate impact, and how that over-reliance pushes some schools to violate Title VI’s ban on race discrimination rather than honor it. In Part III, we elaborate on why school discipline is important and present evidence that the Department of Education’s policy has contributed to the problem of disorderly classrooms, especially in schools with high minority student enrollment. In Part IV, we discuss how aggregate racial disparities in discipline do not in themselves show the discrimination against African Americans, Hispanics, and American Indians that some proponents of the Department of Education’s policy claim. Rather, the evidence shows that they are the result of differences in behavior. In Part V, we explain why the Department of Education’s disparate impact policy is not just wrong-headed, but also unauthorized by law.
奥巴马时代教育部关于学校纪律中种族差异的倡议:对学生和教师来说是错误的,对法律来说是错误的
2010年3月8日,奥巴马政府执政一年后,教育部长阿恩·邓肯发表了一篇充满激情的演讲,他在演讲中(正确地)断言,非裔美国学生受到学校纪律处分的比例高于白人学生。虽然他没有提到这一点,但白人学生受到学校纪律处分的比例高于亚裔美国学生,而男性学生受到纪律处分的比例高于女性学生,这也是事实。作为对他所发现的种族差异的回应,邓肯承诺,教育部将加强对1964年《民权法案》第六章的执行。在接下来的几年里,教育部兑现了这一承诺,根据统计差异开展了大量调查。2014年1月18日,美国教育部和司法部就学校纪律问题联合发表“致同事信”,称法律不仅禁止实际的种族纪律歧视,而且禁止“不合理的”歧视性影响。在本文的第一部分中,我们指出“差异性影响”硬币有两面。教育部只关注这样一个事实:作为一个群体,非裔美国学生比其他学生更容易被停学和开除。由于没有考虑到硬币的另一面——非裔美国学生可能不成比例地成为教室混乱的受害者——它的政策可能弊大于利,甚至对邓肯部长试图帮助的群体也是如此。在第二部分中,我们更详细地讨论了教育部对学校纪律的执行政策,它对种族差异影响的过度依赖,以及这种过度依赖如何促使一些学校违反第六章禁止种族歧视的规定,而不是尊重它。在第三部分中,我们详细阐述了为什么学校纪律是重要的,并提供了证据,证明教育部的政策导致了教室混乱的问题,特别是在少数民族学生入学率高的学校。在第四部分中,我们讨论了学科上的总体种族差异本身如何不表现出对非裔美国人、西班牙裔美国人和美洲印第安人的歧视,而这正是教育部政策的一些支持者所声称的。相反,有证据表明,它们是行为差异的结果。在第五部分,我们解释了为什么教育部的差别影响政策不仅是错误的,而且是未经法律授权的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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