Examining the relationship between school suspensions/expulsions and felonies

This paper examines the suspensions and expulsions of students. Using individual student pupil (rather than incident) data, this research examines whether these rates are driven by a few high-volume offenders and whether high-volume offenders become felons. This study uses the number of students at...

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Veröffentlicht in:Criminal justice studies 2014-04, Vol.27 (2), p.149-158
Hauptverfasser: Forsyth, Craig J., Asmus, Gary, Howat, Holly, Pei, Lai K., Forsyth, York A., Stokes, Billy R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper examines the suspensions and expulsions of students. Using individual student pupil (rather than incident) data, this research examines whether these rates are driven by a few high-volume offenders and whether high-volume offenders become felons. This study uses the number of students at three levels of violations: 0 offenses, 1-3 offenses, and four or more offenses. The authors also examined the relationship between the three groups of violators and committing a felony as a juvenile. The number of offenses per student ranged from 0 to 31. Findings indicated that those with 0 school infractions had no felonies, while the other two groups of violators 1-3 and four or more had a similar numbers of felonies. Implications for developmental models of delinquency are discussed.
ISSN:1478-601X
1478-6028
DOI:10.1080/1478601X.2013.844463