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Tuesday, May 8, 2012

CPS discipline too harsh?


Today I read an article in the Huffington Post, Chicago edition about CPS and their discipline issue. To me this is such a complex issue that I almost don’t know where to start. It is a very short article (link below) however; it so far has prompted over 97 comments, all interesting with merit in their own perspectives. I grew up in Chicago and went to a myriad of schools from test-in-only gifted schools to high priced catholic prepatory schools to the local neighborhood corner school. My opinions and feeling of these individual schools have changed over the years and given me perspective on my views of them when I was attending them. I say this because this school experience gave me a diverse background and insight into how they are run, the type of students that attend tehm, and the culture cultivated there as well.



This article, as I said, addresses the discipline issue facing inner city schools in the Chicago area. Many of these schools have notorious reputations or are breeding grounds for various gangs from the respective neighborhoods. The article states that a group of students staged a protest to the current discipline system demanding that it is reevaluated for its harsh standards. Student activist favor “restorative justice programs” and peer juries to determine disciplinary measures needed on a case by case basis.



Well, duh. You catch more bees with honey than vinegar. Teens have conflict because they lack the life skills to handle various situations and weigh the consequences of those actions against long periods of time. Well, most teens, of course there are the exceptions. Most kids can’t realize that whatever Suzy or Johnny did that made them mad will not matter in the grand scheme of things later. And of course this is something that is more prevalent in young teens and dissipates though the years with…waitforit…life experience. Yes, that’s correct folks, life experience.



Now, let’s think about this in terms of the CPS and their disciplinary measures. Most schools have very strict zero tolerance policies in effect for a variety of offenses. Zero tolerance sometimes is necessary however not an effective long term cure for social ills. Schools are supposed to nurture a child, and help them grow into a well developed and educated adult. New rules and government legislations have turned schools into privatized institutions that can be likened to the penal system. When a student is unruly they are immediately expelled and no longer the school’s problem. How does this help a student learn the skills he needs to act appropriately in this type of situation? All this does is put a brick wall in this student’s life and force him/her to try another route, bitter from the previous experience. Couple that with the fact that most of the “bad” schools are also in “bad” neighborhoods. Compound that with the fact that these students face all kinds of challenges everyday based solely on the location of where they live. Pressure to join street gangs, sell drugs, not got shot in a drive by, etc is enough for a 15yr old to deal with that they may overreact to a irrational situation or lash out in school. These kids don’t have the skills to handle everything in their life. And that is not their fault. How long have these “bad” neighborhoods been “bad”? One, two, three generations worth?



These kids need love, and respect, and guidance from all areas and aspects of their life. Facing them with strait harshness is not productive in building a relationship, it only builds a brick wall and turns them away. Tough love is needed, but only after unconditional love has been applied first. Kids need to know we actually do listen to them and understand, because we were misunderstood kids once. They need to know we understand that they will make mistakes and things sometimes happen, but learning from that mistake and applying that knowledge later is the most important part of that mistake.







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