Criminalizing Children at School
19 April 13
Stationing police in schools, while common today, was 
virtually unknown during the 1970s. Things began to change with the 
surge of juvenile crime during the '80s, followed by an overreaction 
among school officials. Then came the 1999 Columbine High School 
shooting outside Denver, which prompted a surge in financing for 
specially trained police. In the mid-1970s, police patrolled about 1 
percent of schools. By 2008, the figure was 40 percent.
The belief that police officers automatically make 
schools safer was challenged in a 2011 study that compared federal crime
 data of schools that had police officers with schools that did not. It 
found that the presence of the officers did not drive down crime. The 
study - by Chongmin Na of The University of Houston, Clear Lake, and 
Denise Gottfredson of the University of Maryland - also found that with 
police in the buildings, routine disciplinary problems began to be 
treated as criminal justice problems, increasing the likelihood of 
arrests.
Children as young as 12 have been treated as criminals
 for shoving matches and even adolescent misconduct like cursing in 
school. This is worrisome because young people who spend time in adult 
jails are more likely to have problems with law enforcement later on. 
Moreover, federal data suggest a pattern of discrimination in the 
arrests, with black and Hispanic children more likely to be affected 
than their white peers.
In Texas, civil rights groups filed a federal 
complaint against the school district in the town of Bryan. The lawyers 
say African-American students are four times as likely as other students
 to be charged with misdemeanors, which can carry fines up to $500 and 
lead to jail time for disrupting class or using foul language.
The criminalization of misbehavior so alarmed the New York City Council that, in 2010, it passed the Student Safety Act,
 which requires detailed police reports on which students are arrested 
and why. (Data from the 2011-12 school year show that black students are
 being disproportionately arrested and suspended.)
Some critics now want to require greater transparency 
in the reporting process to make the police even more forthcoming. 
Elsewhere in the country, judges, lawmakers and children's advocates 
have been working hard to dismantle what they have begun to call the 
school-to-prison pipeline.
Given the growing criticism, districts that have 
gotten along without police officers should think twice before deploying
 them in school buildings.
 
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Link me YOUR experiences, please.