Wisconsin
Related: About this forumWisconsin schools called police on students at twice the national rate
Wisconsin schools called police on students at twice the national rate for Native students, it was the highest
School officials refer thousands of children to the police each year. In Wisconsin, children with disabilities or who are Black, Latino or Native bear the brunt of it.
By Corey Mitchell, Joe Yerardi and Susan Ferriss
Center for Public Integrity
The 2017-18 school year was difficult at Lakeland Union High School. Disciplinary problems came in waves for the Oneida County school in February 2018, two students were arrested for making terror threats just days after the mass shooting at Floridas Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
That was a rough year, said Chad Gauerke, the school principal. Lakeland referred over 6% of its students to police, including the two teenagers, whose separate threats shut down the school for a day.
Lakeland wasnt the only Wisconsin district which saw a high level of police involvement that school year. Public schools in Wisconsin referred students to police twice as often as schools nationwide in 2017-18 nine students were referred to police for every 1,000 students enrolled compared to the national rate of 4.5, a Center for Public Integrity analysis of U.S. Department of Education data found.
Just three states New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Virginia reported higher rates of referral than Wisconsin.
Much much more at:
https://www.channel3000.com/wisconsin-schools-called-police-on-students-at-twice-the-national-rate-for-native-students-it-was-the-highest/
Tetrachloride
(8,447 posts)4000 in the city limits. Overwhelmingly , white (Caucasian)
My father was born in a similar area.
tulipsandroses
(6,217 posts)Schools need more resources. Counselors, nurses. Rep Bush just said what Ive always thought. Why dont we let police officers be police officers and leave social work and such to trained professionals. Its mind boggling that kids can get arrested for things that many have done in the past.
There were not mass arrests for school yard fights in the past. Throwing things at the teacher or other students didnt get u arrested. I am not saying any of this is ok. What needs to happen is having resources to identify kids that may be struggling because of mental health. Many go undiagnosed. Heck its not like we prioritize health care after these fetuses leave the womb. People who can not only assess the student, but also the family. Whats going on at home? Abuse? Mom and dad are addicts? Does the kid have the burden of being the caregiver of younger siblings while mom works 3 jobs? So many scenarios that may cause a kid to act out. Basic things like is the child hungry? Its insane that police can be called on a 1st grader acting out.
It just pisses me off that we have so many unmet needs and we have the funds to do it but our politicians are too busy catering to rich donors