
THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2019 @ TRUMAN HIGH SCHOOL (MAP)

Watch
PANELISTS

Eric Camburn, PhD
Sherman Family Foundation Endowed Chair and Director of the Urban Education Research Center, UMKC

Justice Gatson
Kansas City Organizer, ACLU Missouri

Wendy Kline, EdD
Assistant Principal, Truman High School

Vanessa Ramirez
Van Horn High School 2017
Read bio
Eric Camburn has conducted research on school improvement, school leadership, and inequalities in educational opportunity for three decades. His research has contributed to the field’s understanding of social inequalities in the secondary and postsecondary outcomes of urban students, and of factors that promote and impede the progress of urban students at key junctures. Eric has worked collaboratively with multiple urban school districts to help inform improvement initiatives through research evidence.
Read bio
Justice Gatson is active in many social justice causes. In addition to her work for the ACLU Missouri, she is a Sister Doula at Uzazi Village, the founder of Reale Justice Network, and a core leader of One Struggle KC. Justice formed “Social Justice Doulas International” and has coined the term “Social Justice Doula” (SJD), which describes a trained professional that supports community members affected by all forms of social injustice, generational trauma, and historical violence.
Read bio
Wendy Kline is an assistant principal at Truman High School in the Independence, Missouri School District. Truman has approximately 1600 students and over 100 faculty and staff. Wendy taught Social Studies and was the Student Services Coordinator and an assistant principal at Van Horn High School. She served four years as the associate principal at Independence Academy which is the alternative K-12 campus. Wendy holds degrees from Park University, Avila University, and St. Louis University.
Read bio
Vanessa Ramirez is a student at the University of Missouri, majoring in Political Science. This semester, she is working for Kansas City Girls Preparatory Academy which, when it welcomes its first students in Fall2019, will become the first single-gender charter public school in Kansas City. Vanessa is also co-creator of Fresher Than U, a custom air freshener business that puts young artists’ work on everyday items. She is a proud Chicana, advocating for human rights and quality education for everyone.

Moderator: Brian Ellison
Read bio
Brian Ellison is Executive Director of Covenant Network of Presbyterians. He is also a regular substitute host on KCUR 89.3’s daily talk shows, Central Standard and Up to Date, as well as a breaking-news and election-night anchor. Brian’s reporting on Missouri politics and government has included appearances on NPR’s Here and Now, KCPT’s Kansas City Week in Review, and Ken Rudin’s Political Junkie.
FACT SHEET
FACT SHEET
American Public Square
Racial Disparities in School Discipline
Civil rights groups have observed “gross racial disparities” in student punishment in our public schools. There are concerns that these inequalities in treatment violate students’ civil rights. Moreover, unequal treatment in school punishment leads to far-reaching negative outcomes – the school to prison pipeline.
In a 2015 report from the Center for Civil Rights Remedies from UCLA, researchers who studied discipline and racial disparities in schools found Missouri ranked first “in the country for the [out-of-school] suspension of Black elementary school students.” According to the report, Missouri suspended over 14% of Black elementary students and [has] the largest Black/White gap for suspensions at the elementary level (1).
In 2017 the ACLU issued a report, From School to Prison: Missouri’s Pipeline of Injustice, on racial disparity in school discipline and determined that the Missouri data are “beyond alarming and indicate that Missouri public schools are not engaging
Looking at the Missouri numbers by gender, Black male students received nearly four times the out-of-school suspensions as White male students (3). Black girls in Missouri schools received 35 percent of all in-school suspensions though they only represented 14 percent of the female student population (4). Beyond
School discipline policies, left unchecked, have consequences and costs, not only for the
There is an economic cost to racial disparities in school discipline. “In Missouri, it costs $89,170 a year to pay for one child in a juvenile justice facility.” Compare this to the average cost of educating a student for one year – $10,802. The cost for juvenile justice robs other sectors of the state economy including education (10).
States are searching for ways to provide alternative approaches to suspension and school arrests. “Fourteen states have already passed measures designed to reduce or eliminate exclusionary discipline practices” (11). Virginia for
REFERENCES
- Daniel Losen, Cheri Hodson, Michael A. Keith II, Katrina Morrison, Shakti
Belway “Are We Closing the School Discipline Gap?” February 23, 2015. p. 7. LINK https://www.civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/resources/projects/center-for-civil-rights-remedies/school-to-prison-folder/federal-reports/are-we-closing-the-school-discipline-gap/?searchterm=are%20we%20closing%20the%20discipline%20gap - ACLU Missouri. Missouri’s Pipeline of Injustice: From School to Prison, p.6. https://www.aclu-mo.org/en/missouris-pipeline-injustice-school-prison
LINK , p. 28.- , p. 26.
- , p. 7.
- , p. 6.
- , p. 9.
- Daniel Losen, Cheri Hodson, Michael A. Keith II, Katrina Morrison, Shakti
Belway “Are We Closing the School Discipline Gap?” February 23, 2015. p. 4. LINK - ACLU Missouri. Missouri’s Pipeline of Injustice, p. 19 & 21. https://www.aclu-mo.org/en/missouris-pipeline-injustice-school-prison
LINK , p. 20.- , p. 39
- Justin Mattingly. “Northam signs student discipline reform bills as Virginia schools still disproportionately suspend black students.” Richmond Times-Dispatch, June 3, 2018. LINK https://www.richmond.com/news/virginia/government-politics/general-assembly/northam-signs-student-discipline-reform-bills-as-virginia-schools-still/article_ee156e85-43b8-59ce-be13-e767818e9b91.html
- Moxley, Elle. “ACLU: Missouri Schools Still Punishing Black Students More Severely Than White Students.” KCUR, July 31, 2018. LINK https://www.kcur.org/post/why-kansas-city-public-schools-are-taking-trauma-sensitive-approach-discipline#stream/0