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Minor Infractions Are Not Minor: School Infractions for Minor Misconduct May Increase Adolescents' Defiant Behavior and Contribute to Racial Disparities in School Discipline

机译:轻微的违规行为不小:小学违规行为可能会增加青少年的挑衅行为,并促进学校纪律的种族差异

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Although minor misconduct is normative in adolescence, such behavior may be met with punishment in American schools. As part of a punitive disciplinary approach, teachers may give adolescents official infractions for minor misconduct-that is, a minor infraction-presumably to deter future problem behavior. This article investigates three arguments that challenge the wisdom of this assumption and considers the potentially detrimental effects of minor infractions: (a) minor infractions increase, rather than deter, adolescents' defiant behavior; (b) these effects are exacerbated among adolescents who are highly attached to school; and (c) teachers' punishment of minor misconduct may be racially biased, resulting in African American students receiving more minor infractions than White students. To test these hypotheses, 729 adolescents' school disciplinary records were analyzed over 1 academic year. Longitudinal multilevel analyses were conducted to assess (a) if receiving minor infractions predicted later increases in infractions for defiant behavior at the within-student level, (b) whether adolescents' attachment to school moderated this association, and (c) if a disparity existed between African American and White students' average level of minor infractions. Results indicated that minor infractions predicted subsequent rises in defiant behavior, and this link was exacerbated for adolescents who reported initially high levels, but not low levels, of school attachment. Furthermore, African American students received more minor infractions than White students, controlling for a host of risk factors for school misconduct. Findings are discussed in relation to American school discipline policies and African Americans' persistent over representation in school discipline and the criminal justice system.
机译:虽然青春期的轻微不当行为是规范的,但这些行为可以在美国学校惩罚。作为一种惩罚性纪律方法的一部分,教师可能会给青少年进行官方违规,以进行轻微的不当行为 - 也就是说,令人轻微的违规可能是为了阻止未来的问题行为。本文调查了三个挑战这一假设智慧的论据,并考虑了轻微违规的潜在不利影响:(a)较小的违规行为增加,而不是阻止青少年的挑衅行为; (b)这些效果在高度附加到学校的青少年中加剧; (c)教师对轻微不当行为的惩罚可能是种族偏见的,导致非洲裔美国学生接受比白人学生更轻微的违规行为。为了测试这些假设,729名青少年的学科记录分析了1个学年。进行纵向多级分析以评估(a)如果在学生级别的违法行为增加违规行为的违规行为增加,(b)是对学校的依恋的违反行为的增加,如果存在差异,那么(c)非洲裔美国和白人学生之间的平均轻微违规水平。结果表明,次要违规预测后续行为上升,对于初始高水平,但不是低级的青少年而言,这种环节加剧了学校依恋的青少年。此外,非洲裔美国学生比白人学生接受了更多的次要违规行为,控制着一系列危险因素的学校不当行为。调查结果是关于美国学校纪律政策和非洲裔美国人对学校纪律和刑事司法系统的代表性的持久性的讨论。

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