Report Tackles Out-of-School Suspension
by Sarah Vanderbilt | August 8, 2008 9:54 AM
Posted to General News

Bridgeport, Hartford, New Britain, New London, and New Haven rank in the top five districts statewide for highest out-of-school suspension rates, a practice that’s not working, according to a report released Thursday by Connecticut Voices for Children, an education research and advocacy group.
Download the full report here.
The report, which says out-of-school suspensions are in most cases both ineffective and counterproductive, comes on the heels of a law that passed the state General Assembly last year requiring suspensions to be served in school unless “the pupil being suspended poses such a danger to persons or property or such a disruption of the educational process that the pupil shall be excluded from school during the period of suspension.”
Click here to continue reading Sarah’s report.





Comments (1)
Posted by: Lisa Lombardo | August 24, 2008 5:23 PM
I am a CT educator and I would like to know who proposed this legislation and how could something like this pass without engaging an open dialogue with the individuals it affects the most? Thanks,
Lisa Lombardo