From the School Yard to the Squad Car: School Discipline, Truancy, and Arrest

Since the 1990’s, implementation of zero tolerance policies in schools has led to increased use of school suspension and expulsion as disciplinary techniques for students with varying degrees of infractions. An unintended consequence of zero tolerance policies is that school suspension or expulsion...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of youth and adolescence 2014-07, Vol.43 (7), p.1110-1122
Hauptverfasser: Monahan, Kathryn C., VanDerhei, Susan, Bechtold, Jordan, Cauffman, Elizabeth
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creator Monahan, Kathryn C.
VanDerhei, Susan
Bechtold, Jordan
Cauffman, Elizabeth
description Since the 1990’s, implementation of zero tolerance policies in schools has led to increased use of school suspension and expulsion as disciplinary techniques for students with varying degrees of infractions. An unintended consequence of zero tolerance policies is that school suspension or expulsion may increase risk for contact with the juvenile justice system. In the present study, we test how forced absence from school via suspension or expulsion and chosen absence from school (truancy) are associated with the likelihood of being arrested. Using month-level data from 6,636 months from a longitudinal study of delinquent adolescents (N = 1,354; 13.5 % female; 41.5 % Black, 33.5 % Hispanic-American, 20.2 % White), we compare the likelihood of being arrested, within individuals, for months when youth were and were not suspended or expelled from school and for months when youth were and were not truant. Finally, we test if these associations were moderated by stable demographic characteristics (sex, race, age, history of problem behaviors) and time-varying contextual factors (peer delinquency, parental monitoring, and commitment to school). Being suspended or expelled from school increased the likelihood of arrest in that same month and this effect was stronger among youth who did not have a history of behavior problems and when youth associated with less delinquent peers. Truancy independently contributed to the likelihood of arrest, but this association was explained by differences in parental monitoring and school commitment. Thus, school disciplinary action places youth at risk for involvement in the juvenile justice system and this may be especially true for less risky youth.
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subjects Absenteeism
Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior - psychology
Adolescents
Arrests
At risk students
Behavior Problems
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Child and School Psychology
Child development
Childrearing Practices
Clinical Psychology
Discipline Policy
Drug use
Education policy
Empirical Research
Expulsions & suspensions
Female
Health Psychology
History of Psychology
Humans
Hypotheses
Interviews as Topic
Juvenile Delinquency
Juvenile Delinquency - psychology
Juvenile Justice
Law and Psychology
Law Enforcement
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Models, Psychological
Models, Statistical
Policy Implementation
Psychology
Punishment - psychology
Risk
Risk Factors
School discipline
Schools
Students
Suspension
Task forces
Truancy
Youth
Zero tolerance
Zero Tolerance Policy
title From the School Yard to the Squad Car: School Discipline, Truancy, and Arrest
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