Putting Politics
Aside to Protect our Kids—A Review of the Federal Commission’s School Safety
Report
[CLICK
HERE for the full Blog message]
Dear
Colleagues,
Introduction
Happy New Year !!! I hope that everyone had a great Holiday. . .
filled with relaxation, relatives, reflection, and renewal . . . especially as
we now gear up for the rest of the school year.
And so, as we turn to 2019, I decided to
review some of the educational “themes” discussed in my Blogs during 2018. I do this because I truly believe that, while
imperfect, we can learn from history. . . avoiding the mistakes of the
past, while building on the successes that can positively impact our future.
Part I of this year-end “2018 Review”
was posted during the week of Christmas.
I hope you had a chance to read it.
It was titled:
The School
Year in Review: Choosing High-Success Academic
and Behavioral Strategies (Part I). Committing to
Educational Excellence by Learning from Hattie’s and SEL’s Limitations
In that Blog, we discussed and analyzed the
following themes:
- Theme 1: Choosing High-Success Initiatives. Here, we discussed the importance of schools doing their own science-to-research “due diligence” so that they adopt and implement defensible and high-probability-of-success initiatives and programs on behalf of their students and staff.
We also critically reviewed the research of John Hattie—detailing
the strengths and limitations of meta-analytic studies, and emphasizing that
schools cannot take Hattie’s effect sizes and move directly to
implementation. Indeed, because
meta-analysis statistically pools many separate research studies together,
these studies often have different methods, procedures, strategies, and
implementation sequences.
Thus, in reading Hattie’s different results, schools
would not know exactly what to implement in any one area without
critically evaluating the separate studies that were pooled together.
- Theme 2: The Selling of Social-Emotional Learning (SEL). As a specific example of Theme 1, we encouraged schools to critically look at the history and foundation of the Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) “movement”—especially as led through the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning (CASEL).
More specifically, schools need to understand the money
and politics behind the CASEL movement, and recognize the serious flaws in the
research that it often cites as the backbone of its practices.
Our primary recommendation in this area is for schools to
“step back” and reassess how to use more effective science-to-practice
approaches to improve students’ social, emotional, and behavioral skills and
self-management abilities.
_ _ _ _ _
In today’s Part II, we will discuss
and analyze the second set of 2018 themes:
- Theme 3: Preventing School Shootings. Here, we will encourage schools to go “Back to the Future” by reviewing past recommendations from previous years’ school shooting analyses when re-evaluating their current school safety systems and approaches. Clearly, this is especially important given the rash of school shootings during 2018.
This discussion also will critically review—in the most
depoliticized way possible—the Federal Commission on School Safety’s
Final Report released less than four weeks ago on December 18, 2018.
- Theme 4: School Discipline and Disproportionality. Here, we will review the importance of proactive, scientifically-based, and multi-tiered school discipline approaches, as well as how to realistically, comprehensively, and pragmatically address the issue of disproportionality. . . especially with students of color and/or with disabilities.
This theme will discuss the implications of the U.S.
Department of Education’s December 21, 2018 rescission of the Obama-era
guidance aimed at reducing racial discrimination when students are
disciplined. This was done officially by
Secretary DeVos just three days after the release of the Federal Commission
on School Safety’s Final Report which included this in its recommendations.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _
Theme 3:
Preventing School Shootings—Going Back to the Future
During 2018, at the Kindergarten through
Grade 12 levels, there were 24 school shootings with injuries or deaths. Two elementary, four middle, and 18 high
schools were involved. Twenty-eight
students and seven adults or school employees were killed. And, 79 others were injured.
The youngest victim was 14. The oldest victim was 64.
The shootings occurred from Alaska to
California to Pennsylvania to Florida. . . and multiple states in between. Of the 35 deaths, 27 combined lost their
lives either at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, or at Santa Fe
High School in Texas.
Of the 13 shootings that occurred in schools
during the school day, 10 had police officers or SROs assigned to their schools,
and approximately 19,965 students were exposed to the violence.
Thirteen of the 25 perpetrators were
students themselves, 9 attended the school where the shooting occurred, and 19
of the known 21 shooters were male.
_ _ _ _ _
We mourned for those who lost their
lives. We pray for a return to health
for the injured. And we dedicate
ourselves to taking the definitive actions needed to prevent similar tragedies
in the future.
Below are the 2018 Blogs written in this
theme area. . . with their titles, dates of publication, and web-links to the
original messages.
[CLICK on the
Date below to link to the Original Blog]
February
24, 2018 School
Shootings: History Keeps Repeating Itself. . . What We Already Know, and
What Schools, Staff, and Students Need to Do (Part I)
March
10, 2018 School
Shootings, Comprehensive Prevention, Mandatory (Mental Health) Reporting, and
Standardized Threat Assessments: What Schools, Staff, and Students Need
to Do, and the Help that They Need to Do It (Part II)
March
25, 2018 School
Climate, Student Voice, On-Campus Shootings, and now Corporal
Punishment??? Listening to Students—When They Make Sense; and Not
Listening to Students—When They’re Ready to Kill (Part III)
September
8, 2018 Preventing
School Shootings and Violence. . . States Not Waiting for the Federal
Commission on School Safety Report: The Guidance You Need is Here and
Available
_ _ _ _ _
The Blog Take-Aways
When writing the
Blogs above, I took both an historical and an applied perspective. The goal here is to prevent (or at least
minimize) more school shooting fatalities and casualties, the broader impacts
of any shootings that occur—as well as to prevent other incidents related more
broadly to school violence.
Significantly, I
know the history. And I have worked with
schools in this area for over 35 years.
Indeed, I was on
the writing team for the Early Warning, Timely Response: A Guide to Safe
Schools document that was commissioned and distributed nationwide by the
U.S. Department of Education to every school in 1998 after the Jonesboro,
Arkansas school shooting.
Here are the brief
Blog take-aways:
[CLICK
HERE for the full Blog message that expands on this Theme’s key
Take-Aways and provides details from additional, recent reports on the number
of children and adolescents who die each year from gun-related incidents.]
- Take-Away #1. Virtually all of the recent school shooting re-analyses have confirmed what we have known for almost 15 years: there is no single “profile” to predict a school shooter; the shooters had different motives—including some whose acts were random; many of the shooters had no diagnosed mental health issues; and there were “warning signs” in some, but not all, of the events.
Thus, the factors
related to school shootings are complex, and the ways to prevent them must be
layered and overlapping.
More specifically, districts
need to balance the physical and technological “hardening” of their schools,
with their social, emotional, behavioral, and mental health-related “softening.” This latter area includes an increased focus
on school safety and positive school climate, prosocial relationships and
conflict prevention, classroom management and student engagement, and students’
social, emotional, and behavioral self-management.
_ _ _ _ _
- Take-Away #2. After analyzing existing (largely state) gun control and related access laws—due to post-school-shooting calls for federal legislation—we concluded that the potential to successfully impact our nation’s laws in this area already exists... because many states have already passed significant, successful, and impactful legislation.
Critically—and non-politically—the
goal is not to abolish individuals’ gun rights.
The goal is to control what weapons are available, to limit children and
adolescents’ access to guns, and to
improve the accountability to and protection of others.
_ _ _ _ _
- Take-Away #3. In addition to the points in Take-Away #2, two related recommendations were suggested:
* We need to establish federal laws, similar to
the existing child abuse laws nationwide, that require professionals and others
to report individuals (including students) who are suspected of potentially
committing school violence.
* We also need to develop and require, at the
state or federal level, a standardized threat assessment for any individual
reported as immediately above.
_ _ _ _ _
- Take-Away #4. Finally, in my September 8, 2018 Blog, I predicted that the forthcoming Federal Commission on School Safety Final Report would (a) reflect more of a political agenda than an objective school safety agenda; (b) not include any recommendations for gun control; (c) not break new ground relative to the school safety recommendations advanced; and (d) depend largely on frameworks or programs (e.g., PBIS) that have been historically funded and singularly promoted by the U.S. Department of Education—even though they have never demonstrated broad, data-based, and field-implemented success.
Unfortunately, my
September, 2018 predictions regarding the Commission’s Report largely
came true. What was surprising (but
predictable) was that the Commission did not release its Report until
December 18, 2018—at a time when most schools were closing for the Holiday
break, and most news agencies were focused on other critical news events.
_ _ _ _ _
A Brief Analysis
of the Final Report of the Federal Commission on School Safety. . . With
Recommendations on What Schools Need to do Now
The Federal
Commission on School Safety consisted of four Cabinet Secretaries: Betsy
DeVos, U.S. Secretary of Education (chair); Matthew Whitaker, Acting Attorney
General of the United States (replacing former Attorney General Jeff Sessions);
Alex Azar, U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services; and Kirstjen M.
Nielsen, U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security.
Released on
December 18, 2018, the Commission Report consists of 19 chapters, 180
pages, and 100 policy recommendations.
Significantly, with its focus on “local solutions for local problems,”
the Report proposed no new federal money—especially for mental health services,
and it leaves implementation largely up to states and school districts.
Take-Aways. An Education Week article published
almost immediately after the Report’s release cited seven Take-Aways:
- Take-Away #1. The Commission wants school districts to take a hard look at arming "specially selected and trained" school staff.
- Take-Away #2. There's not much in the report when it comes to restricting access to guns.
- Take-Away #3. The Commission has lots of love—but proposes no new money—for mental health services.
- Take-Away #4. The Commission wants districts to make schools "harder" targets.
- Take-Away #5. It's mostly going to be up to states and school districts to implement these policies.
- Take-Away #6. The report contains a Christmas tree of recommendations on everything from cyberbullying to psychotropic drugs.
- Take-Away #7. As widely expected, the report recommends scrapping the Obama administration's discipline guidance that directly address disproportionality.
_ _ _ _ _
Beyond this Education
Week article, I have reviewed other analyses of the Commission’s
Report, including those from a number of national educational publications and
associations, respectively. In general,
virtually all of these analyses conclude that the Report (a) broke very little
new ground, (b) passes the buck (no pun intended) to the states and the
districts with no recommendations for new funding, and (c) completely ignored the
issue of gun control.
But rather than rehash a Report that
disappointed most educators, I would like to do two things. First, point you to the Report’s Appendix
B which provides a well-organized summary of past findings and
recommendations from key school safety reports.
Second, I want to call your attention again
to a section from my September 8, 2018 Blog which detailed the steps that
schools and districts should take to create a Targeted Violence Protection Plan.
[CLICK
HERE for the full Blog message that quotes the Learning First
Alliance’s specific “take” on the Report, that provides an overview of Appendix
B, and that details the most-essential information from my previous September
8, 2018 Blog.]
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _
Theme 4:
School Discipline and Disproportionality: Research to Practice
Many of my Blogs over the years have focused
on helping districts and schools to establish and sustain sound and effective
science-to-practice school discipline, classroom management, and student
self-management approaches. These
approaches are essential to creating safe schools and classrooms, prosocial and
collaborative student interactions, positive learning environments, and student
engagement and achievement.
But embedded in this process is the issue of
the disproportionate rates of office discipline referrals and school
suspensions experienced by students of color and those with disabilities.
Indeed, the most-recent federal data on
student discipline (from the 2015-2016 school year) shows that, while
approximately 2.7 million students were suspended at least once during that
year (about 100,000 fewer than during the 2013-2014 school year), the racial
disparity gap in discipline referrals did not close.
More specifically, during the 2015-2016
school year, African-American boys and girls each made up just 8% of enrolled
students. Nonetheless, African-American
boys made up 25% of all students suspended at least once, and African-American
girls accounted for 14% of the total.
_ _ _ _ _
Numerous Blogs addressed all of these issues
during 2018. Below are their titles,
dates of publication, and web-links to the original message.
[CLICK on the Date below to link to the
Original Blog]
April
15, 2018 New
Federal Government Report Finds that Disproportionate School Discipline Actions
Persist with Black, Male, and Special Education Students: Manipulating
Policy, Buying Programs, and Following Federally-Funded Technical Assistance
Centers Do Not Work (Part I)
May
5, 2018
Decreasing Disproportionate School Discipline Actions with Black, Male, and
Special Education Students: A Roadmap to Success. Taking a Hard
Look at Our Practices, Our Interactions, and Ourselves (Part II)
May
23, 2018 Solving the
Disproportionate School Discipline Referral Dilemma: When will Districts
and Schools Commit to the Long-term Solutions? There are No Silver
Bullets—Only Science to Preparation to Implementation to Evaluation to
Celebration (Part III)
July
7, 2018
Elementary School Principals’ Biggest Concern: Addressing Students’ Behavior
and Emotional Problems. The Solution? Project ACHIEVE’s Multi-Tiered,
Evidence-Based Roadmap to Success
August
18, 2018 Students’ Mental
Health Status, and School Safety, Discipline, and Disproportionality: An
Anthology of Previous Blogs. Integrating Successful Research-to-Practice
Strategies into the New School Year (Part II of II)
September
22, 2018 The U.S.
Department of Education Wants to “Rethink Special Education,” But Is It Willing
to Look at Itself First? The Department Needs to Change at the “Top” in
Order to Successfully Impact the “Bottom”
_ _ _ _ _
The Take-Aways
If anything, the
disproportionality issue has become more complex during the past few
weeks.
Despite calls by
national education associations, organizations, experts, and others to “leave
things alone,” the Federal Commission on School Safety Report
recommended that the U.S. Department of Education and Justice’s joint guidance,
crafted during the Obama administration, on the disproportionate discipline
rates for students of color and with disabilities be rescinded.
And—not
surprisingly—even though this recommendation had virtually nothing to do with
the primary mission of the Commission, this recommendation was enacted
by Secretary of Education DeVos (who chaired the Commission) on December
21, 2018. . .just three days after the release of the Commission’s
Report.
By way of history,
this guidance was released in 2014 as a Dear Colleague letter
that—according to a December 5, 2018 article by Mark Keierleber of the74million.org:
“. . . put districts that disciplined students of
color and those with disabilities disproportionately on notice that they could
be in violation of federal civil rights laws. The letter targeted discipline
policies that didn’t explicitly mention race but had ‘a disproportionate and
unjustified effect on students of a particular race.’
While acknowledging that a range of factors contribute
to racial disparities in discipline, the Obama administration said the
differences couldn’t be explained by more frequent or serious misbehavior among
students of color, adding that ‘unexplained racial disparities in student discipline
give rise to concerns that schools may be engaging in racial discrimination.’”
But. . . despite the
current Administration’s rescinding of this Guidance, the disproportionality
issue does not really have to become more complex.
This is because
most states and districts nationwide have been working hard (albeit not quite
successfully—see the 2015-2016 school year data above) to address this issue since
even before 2014.
And so, the
question is, “What if these states and districts simply ignored DeVos’
action, and continued working to close the disproportionality gap?”
Indeed, I just
don’t see states and districts nationwide using the rescission of this Guidance
as “permission” to treat different students in inequitable ways.
At the same time, we
have got to do better in closing the disproportionality gap. Below, we summarize the most important
Take-Aways in this area from the above-cited 2018 Blogs.
_ _ _ _ _
Why Disproportionality Outcomes Haven’t Changed
In our April 15,
2018 Blog, we reviewed six primary flaws to explain why most of the
disproportionality “efforts” in our schools have not worked to date:
Flaw #1. Legislatures (and other “leaders”) are trying
to change practices through policies.
Flaw #2. State Departments of Education (and other
“leaders”) are promoting one-size-fits-all programs with “scientific”
foundations that do not exist or are flawed.
Flaw #3. Districts and schools are implementing
disproportionality “solutions” (Frameworks) that target conceptual constructs
rather than teaching social, emotional, and behavioral skills.
Flaw #4.
Districts and Schools are not recognizing that Classroom Management and Teacher
Training, Supervision, and Evaluation are Keys to Decreasing
Disproportionality.
Flaw #5. Schools and Staff are trying to motivate
students to change their behavior when they have not learned, mastered, or
cannot apply the social, emotional, and behavioral skills needed to succeed.
Flaw #6. Districts, Schools, and Staff do not have the
knowledge, skills, and resources needed to implement the multi-tiered
(prevention, strategic intervention, intensive need/crisis management) social,
emotional, and/or behavioral services, supports, and interventions needed by
students.
[CLICK
HERE for the Original Blog message]
By understanding
these flaws, we encouraged districts and schools to evaluate their current
school and schooling outcomes, as well as their school discipline and classroom
management practices—especially with students of color and with disabilities
(SWDs).
Our ultimate
point then was:
During the past ten-plus years of trying to
systemically decrease disproportionality in schools, we have not
comprehensively and objectively identified the root causes of the students’
challenging behaviors, and we have not linked these root causes to
strategically-applied multi-tiered science-to-practice strategies and
interventions that are effectively and equitably used by teachers and
administrators.
Moreover, we
have not comprehensively and objectively identified and addressed the root
causes of staff members’ interactions and reactions with
African-American students, boys, and students with disabilities. . . reactions
that, at times, are the reasons for some disproportionate Office Discipline
Referrals.
And, we have
not comprehensively and objectively identified and addressed the root causes of
administrators’ disproportionate decisions with these students as they
relate to suspensions, expulsions, law enforcement involvement, and referrals
to alternative school programs.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Solving the Disproportionality Dilemma
We continued the
discussion by emphasizing that—in order to establish effective, multi-tiered
systems that address disproportionality—schools need to strategically implement
effective school discipline, classroom management, and student self-management
systems, strategies, and (as needed) strategic and intensive interventions. We then reviewed the five interdependent, science-to-practice
components needed to accomplish this task.
These components involve
services, supports, strategies, and interventions that establish:
* Positive
Relationships and School/Classroom Climate
* Positive Behavioral Expectations and Skills Instruction
* Student Motivation and Accountability
* Consistency
* Implementation and Application Across All Settings and All Peer Groups
* Positive Behavioral Expectations and Skills Instruction
* Student Motivation and Accountability
* Consistency
* Implementation and Application Across All Settings and All Peer Groups
Although the goal
is the same for all students, the ultimate goal here is for
students of color and with disabilities to learn, master, and be able to
apply—from preschool through high school—social, emotional, and behavioral
self-management skills. More
specifically, these involve interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict
prevention and resolution, and emotional control and coping skills.
But all of this
must be accomplished in a systemic way.
That’s where the Commission
seems to have missed the boat.
In an Appendix
to the 2014 Dear Colleague letter (“Recommendations for School
Districts, Administrators, Teachers, and Staff”), the U.S. Department of
Education provided a very sound blueprint for districts and schools in how to
strategically evaluate and “personalize” their approaches to address
disproportionality.
[CLICK
HERE to see a detailed outline of this Appendix in the
Original Blog message]
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _
Summary
As we enter 2019, we hope that our Blog
discussions during 2018 will help you to be more successful at the student,
staff, school, and systems level. While
some of the four themes (especially those related to school shootings) will
hopefully fade into the past, virtually all of the themes are continually
present in our everyday lives as educators.
Once again, we discussed and analyzed the
following themes during Parts I and II of these “Review of 2018” Blogs:
- Theme 1: Choosing High-Success Initiatives. Here, we discussed the importance of schools doing their own science-to-research “due diligence” so that they adopt and implement defensible and high-probability-of-success initiatives and programs on behalf of their students and staff.
- Theme 2: The Selling of Social-Emotional Learning (SEL). As a specific example of the Theme above, we encouraged schools to critically look at the history and foundation of the CASEL/SEL movement, and to “step back” and reassess how to use more effective science-to-practice approaches to improve students’ social, emotional, and behavioral skills and self-management abilities.
- Theme 3: Preventing School Shootings. Here, we encouraged schools to go “Back to the Future” by reviewing past recommendations from previous years’ school shooting analyses when re-evaluating their current school safety systems and approaches.
- Theme 4: School Discipline and Disproportionality. Here, we reviewed the importance of proactive, scientifically-based, and multi-tiered school discipline approaches, as well as how to realistically, comprehensively, and pragmatically address the issue of disproportionality.
_ _ _ _ _
As always, I look forward to your thoughts
and comments. I am always available to
provide a free hour of telephone consultation to those who want to discuss
their own students, school, or district needs.
Feel free to contact me at any time if there is anything that I can do
to support your work.
And. . . . HAPPY NEW YEAR !!!
Best,
Howie