Posted inEducation

We Need to Talk About Preschool Suspensions

Preschool students build a structure from plastic interlocking tubes. (Allison Shelley/The Verbatim Agency for EDUimages via Word in Black)
Preschool students build a structure from plastic interlocking tubes. (Allison Shelley/The Verbatim Agency for EDUimages via Word in Black)

Word in Black is a collaboration of 10 of the nationโ€™s leading Black publishers that frames the narrative and fosters solutions for racial inequities in America.

โ€œYou have to promise me that youโ€™re going to make sure he doesnโ€™t get kicked out of school.โ€

This was the first thing a parent told Tara Kirton, who was working at the time as a one-on-one traveling teacher for special education preschool students.

Preschool suspensions have been studied since the late โ€˜90s, and rates have been relatively unchanged since then, according to a 2022 paper. Early childcare and education remain the โ€œhighest-riskโ€ period for expulsion and suspension, the paper said, as children are three times more likely to be expelled during this time than during their K-12 careers.

Kirton experienced this both working in the classroom and when her own son was in preschool. It also helped shape her studies, as Kirton is both a doctoral student and full-time instructor of early childhood education at Teachers College, Columbia University.ย 

While in a federal policy course, Kirtonโ€™s assignment was to think about an issue and how to tackle it from a federal education policy perspective. Preschool suspensions โ€” and the โ€œunderlying parts of this conversation around anti-Blackness in education, implicit bias in educationโ€ โ€” immediately came to mind.ย Of course, itโ€™s not a one-size-fits-all solution, but โ€œit cannot be on the backs of Black families, to put that onus of all the things that are wrong in early care,โ€ Kirton says. โ€œThis is a systemic issue that needs to be looked at systematically.โ€

50,000 Annual Suspensions and Countingย 

About 250 students are suspended or expelled from preschool each day, according to the 2017 National Survey of Childrenโ€™s Health. This adds up to about 50,000 preschoolers being suspended every year, with 17,000 expelled, according to the Center for American Progress.And that astronomical number isnโ€™t reflective of what actually happens.โ€œWe think itโ€™s way higher because thereโ€™s no true paper trail, thereโ€™s no monitoring and accountability system,โ€ says Darielle Blevins, Ph.D., an assistant research professor at the Childrenโ€™s Equity Project out of Arizona State University.

And those on-the-record suspensions are not equal. Black preschoolers were suspended 2.5 times more than their share of the total preschool population โ€” meaning 18% of preschoolers are Black, and 43% of preschool suspensions were Black students, according to a 2021 report from the U.S. Department of Educationโ€™s Office of Civil Rights. This rises to 48% when referring to students who were suspended more than once.ย 

There were also disparities when broken down by race and gender. Black girls were the only group that accounted for more suspensions than their share of the enrollment.

And one of the more concerning pieces is that it isnโ€™t getting better. With rates being unchanged for the last four decades, โ€œthis is basically something that is considered the norm,โ€ Kirton says.

The preschool suspension crisis needs more awareness. And a way into that, Kirton says, is through the conversation around the United States population becoming โ€œminority white.โ€ With schools becoming majority students of color, it should prompt discussions about policy changes โ€” or risk preschool suspension rates going even higher.

We need to โ€œat least have these conversations,โ€ Kirton says. 

And there are states and programs โ€” like Head Start โ€” that are working toward this. Across the country, 18 states fully implemented policies reducing or eliminating expulsions and suspensions in early childhood education, according to a 2021 report by the National Center for Children in Poverty.

โ€œAs people are seeing the data more,โ€ Blevins says, โ€œwe are seeing more states that are putting policy guidance around suspension and expulsions of young children.โ€

But change canโ€™t happen if the conversations arenโ€™t happening, Kirton says.

โ€œAnytime I do have conversations with people, it brings about a lot of emotion and a lot of anger,โ€ Kirton says. โ€œItโ€™s like, โ€˜Wow, these are the first experiences that weโ€™re exposing children to? What will they then think of school?โ€™โ€

No Longer Identifying as โ€˜Learnersโ€™

A 2020 report by the Childrenโ€™s Equity Project says there isnโ€™t evidence that harsh discipline improves childrenโ€™s behavior, either in the short- or long-term, but there is a lot of research showing it has negative outcomes. 

Children who are suspended in preschool are more likely to experience academic failure and be held back, have negative attitudes toward school, drop out of high school, and be involved with the juvenile justice system, according to a 2019 report published in ScienceDirect.

Students who are told from a young age that they are โ€œbad,โ€ or โ€œmisbehave,โ€ or โ€œdonโ€™t sit willโ€ start to take on that persona.

โ€œChildren who are suspended at that young of an age while theyโ€™re developing their self-concept and who they are start to not identify as learners or scholars,โ€ Blevins says. โ€œThen they start to identify with whatever other message theyโ€™re getting.โ€ 

The โ€˜Draconianโ€™ Thinking โ€˜Children Should Be Seen and Not Heardโ€™

In preschool, the most common reasons for suspensions are being too disruptive โ€” like excessive crying, inattention, or the inability to follow directions โ€” or being too dangerous โ€” like biting, hitting, or otherwise causing harm to themselves or others. In other words, common behaviors among 3-year-olds.

โ€œWe think about children, still, unfortunately, in almost a draconian way: Children should be seen and not heard,โ€ Blevins says.

So, Blevins explains, children might be disciplined in the classroom for behavior that is accepted at home. In Black households, thereโ€™s a lot of overlapping communication with people talking at the same time. But, in a classroom, this could be considered disruptive and, therefore, grounds for suspension.

โ€œYou can end up being suspended, expelled, kicked out of class, told you are disruptive for doing something thatโ€™s culturally appropriate,โ€ Blevins says.

Anti-Blackness shows up in classrooms in a lot of ways, including through the teacherโ€™s implicit bias. Educators may automatically assume that Black children arenโ€™t respectful, and that their behavior is threatening.

โ€œThose ideas and those ideologies around stereotypes of Black men as dangerous are unfortunately overlaid onto children,โ€ Blevins says. โ€œAnd now teachers are viewing a little Black boy whoโ€™s having an age-appropriate tantrum as someone whoโ€™s a threat to the classroom.โ€

Navigating With Little Guidance

For elementary, middle, and high school, there is federal guidance on how to suspend students. But that guidance doesnโ€™t exist for preschools.

โ€œIf youโ€™re a mom-and-pop preschool who just opened down the street, you can do whatever you want,โ€ Blevins says.

So what preschool suspensions often look like are a teacher or director saying the childโ€™s behavior is inappropriate, and a parent has to come pick them up. And it can often come as a surprise to families, who generally arenโ€™t part of these conversations.

โ€œThereโ€™s no formal process. There might not have even been anything written down,โ€ Blevins says. โ€œAnd they probably will never use the word โ€˜suspensionโ€™ because we still donโ€™t view it as that for young children.โ€ 

Not naming it can be โ€œextremely upsetting and extremely jarringโ€ because you know the definition of whatโ€™s happening, but you are being told that what youโ€™re seeing is different, Kirton says. โ€œIt feels like thereโ€™s been a breakdown of communication.โ€

What to Do if Your Child Is Suspended from Preschool

It can be life-altering if your child is suspended from preschool, and emotionally overwhelming. 

โ€œItโ€™s important for parents to first start with self-compassion,โ€ Blevins says, instead of immediately thinking something is their fault. 

And her second piece of advice is to always believe your child. โ€œWe are trained to think that the school knows best and teachers know best. But in these situations, the child really may be treated unfairly.โ€

Here are steps to take if your child is suspended from preschool:

  • Talk it out. Schedule a meeting โ€œas soon as possible,โ€ Kirton says. It would be best to do it in-person so โ€œeveryone is in the same space hearing the same message at the same time.โ€
  • Take time to heal. If itโ€™s an option and you choose to keep your child in the same preschool, know that there will be a healing process โ€œbecause there has been harm done and trauma is there,โ€ Kirton says.
  • Know what youโ€™re looking for. If you pursue another program, make sure you have an idea of what you want before you go on the tour. Do you want staff members who look like your family? What do you want in the environment? Are the bookshelves and posters reflective of your wishes? Can you talk to other families in the program?

When it comes to a preschool, itโ€™s often a long-term relationship with people who you are trusting to care for your child and help them grow and develop, Kirton says.

โ€œYou want to know that, when times are great, weโ€™re going to be happy, and weโ€™re going to make this work,โ€ she says, โ€œbut when times are getting a little tricky, I can still trust you to know that youโ€™re my partner on this journey and that my child is safe with you.โ€

Kirton is gearing up for her dissertation study, which will further examine the experiences of Black children in preschool and daycare programs across New York City. Sheโ€™ll talk to children and families to hear perspectives, and anyone interested in more information should email trk2124@tc.columbia.edu.

This story was originally published on WordinBlack.com.

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