Marin County Grand Jury • 2013-2014

School Suspension: Less is More[PDF]

Published: March 18, 2014 33 pages
View Original PDF

Findings 8 findings

F1
Marin high school boards failed to communicate effectively to administration and staff changes to the Education Code (Section 48900.5) requiring schools to try other means before suspending for nonviolent offenses.
F2
There is a lack of written, specific, and emphatic direction (codification) coming from the three high school boards regarding suspension intervention goals and policies.
F3
Students are being subjected to inconsistent consequences for similar behavior.
F4
Maintaining the recent reductions in overall suspensions at Marin’s high schools will depend upon the support and direction from the district school boards.
F5
Parent-student handbooks are not current and do not provide users adequate insight into suspension alternatives (Terra Linda excepted) or the updated Education Code other means requirement.
F6
Marin high schools and school boards do not thoroughly analyze suspension statistics seeking verifiable cause-and-effect explanations for yearly variance.
F7
Communication among Marin’s school districts, regarding ongoing suspension intervention programs, would help to reduce unnecessary duplication of experience and training.
F8
The response to willful defiance, an ill-defined, nonviolent suspendible offense, is inconsistent across Marin’s high schools and districts.

Recommendations 8