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 Home > Opinion > Story

Published - Tuesday, May 13, 2008

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GUEST VIEW: Student expulsions fail kids

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In the late 1930s, when I was a middle school student in West Salem, we were subjected to the last vestiges of the totally discredited corporal punishment practices for the management of student behavior.

My teacher, an austere woman who practiced “zero tolerance” before the phrase was invented, had the habit of sneaking up behind an offending victim, closing her fist with the middle knuckle sticking out, and whacking the unsuspecting student on the head several times. In more severe discipline situations, she would bring the transgressor to the front of the room, pick up a wicked three-sided ruler, and deliver a few sharp strokes to the palm. When really angry, she would deliver blows to the back of the hand.

Today such treatment of students would result in immediate dismissal. We have learned that corporal punishment simply does not work to achieve the objectives of educating children.

We need to apply this same evolved thinking to student expulsion and ask ourselves: is this punishment achieving positive results compared to alternatives? Does it support the goal of putting children first?

Wisconsin law, under its extremely complex and almost indecipherable Statute 120.13, School District Government, freely permits this draconian practice at the whim of each district school board and its school administrative staff, without meaningful oversight by the Department of Public Instruction.

Because no statute requires other public schools to admit an expelled student, the task of satisfying Wisconsin’s compulsory education law is left to the parents or guardians who must seek alternative educational options within their budget and time limitations. Many times, expelled students merely drift, at tremendous personal cost to themselves, their families and society.

In theory, the expulsion is meted out uniformly under this statute; in practice it is chaotic. Within Dane County, we have one small school district that has, in this academic year alone, expelled at least eight middle school students, all for terms of one school year or more, for first-time offenses that the board claimed qualified under the sheltering blanket of Statute 120.13(c).

This is in sharp contrast with the Middleton, Sun Prairie, Stoughton and Monona Grove districts, which have expelled almost no students. Instead they have wisely replaced expulsion with forward thinking and amazingly successful suspensions, coupled with remedial programs that have kept their troubled children within the public education system while helping them work through their problems.

We need to expand their enlightened practices throughout our 426 school districts, so we can eliminate our scourge of expelling 1,800 students a year.

We need our legislative and executive branches to take a fresh look at Statute 120.13 and make revisions that work toward eliminating the cancer of expulsions by providing a framework built around the positive practices of our successful school districts. The state’s major media should be urged to devote their talent and resources to an in-depth examination of the core question: “Who benefits from expulsions?”

Public hearings throughout the state should be held, and everyone with a stake in the educational system should have a voice, including a representative sampling of those students who were caught up in the expulsion process.

We need to make “children first” a reality, for all. We need to find the will to bring the enlightened alternatives to expulsion to every school district in the state. And we need to remember that it takes a village, town, city and state to raise a child.

Wil Selbrede is a West Salem High School graduate and World War II combat veteran. He now lives in Madison.
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Amy wrote on May 16, 2008 7:12 PM:

" If each child expelled was warranted there would not be an out cry to change the laws. When kindergarten children are suspended or expelled over giving a hug or an eight year expelled over nail clippers there is a problem. How do you feel about a principal suspending a child for chewing gum and telling them they were a good up until now? Our son found a bomb threat at school and was accused of writing it and expelled. I'll be the first to admit that he has faults like his room is usually a mess but he didn't do it. I'm not the type of parent who believes their child at free will. We questioned him, grilled him and we believe him. He not the type of kid who would do this or gain from it. He was active in band, student council, FFA, SADD, 4-H and excelled in most of them. He was popular there and had a girlfriend. Zero Tolerance is not an answer. It didn't work in prison. Why try it on our children? "

reMcAfee wrote on May 14, 2008 2:38 PM:

" I think it is time to look for a new administrator. I have talked to her a number of times and I have not been impressed. "

People who live in glass houses wrote on May 13, 2008 1:37 PM:

" For those of you who don't already know, better than 90% of the kids in our schools have used alcohol or drugs. And yes, that is true even in West Salem. Stop pretending that there are the "pefect" children and the "druggies" and be a part of fixing the problems instead of pointing fingers. You would not necessarily believe the names of some of our top students and athletes who have drank and smoked pot! Yes, in West Salem. When you finally admit that there is a problem, only then can you begin to fix it! "

The Lone Gunman wrote on May 13, 2008 12:26 PM:

" If the writers concern is putting children first, first remember the good children who are behaving and follow the rules. What about their rights to an education and how their education is affected by the disruptive ones who are then expelled. Sometimes i think we need to go back to the Spock Philosophy..The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few...and i don't agree with the socialist view that it takes a village to raise a child. It's not the Governments responsibility to ensure we are taken care of from cradle to grave, that is not what our founding father's wanted. "

Parent wrote on May 12, 2008 2:25 PM:

" One would assume that parents teach their children right from wrong. It is wrong and illegal to do drugs. It is wrong to bring them onto school grounds. If you do bring them onto school grounds you will be expelled. I guess that is a fore warning. There are students that they can sneak it by and when they get caught the school district is the bad guy. I agree there should be an alternative so they can continue their education. Rules are rules. "

ReJust a thought wrote on May 12, 2008 12:22 AM:

" In the game of life, you can get rid of everyone you don't like or agree with. Unless, of course you believe in genocide. "

Just a thought wrote on May 11, 2008 8:46 AM:

" I actually think the students and parents are FAILING the school, not the other way around. These are druggies we're talking about, folks. Why do the other students and the teachers have to put up with them? "

The administration is too close-minded wrote on May 10, 2008 6:34 PM:

" Good luck getting your message heard. The administration running the the high school refuses to listen to the community. They not only have zero tolerance for student infractions, but also community/parent input. "

McAfee wrote on May 10, 2008 5:57 PM:

" With the new Board in place I just know everything will turn out fine. Now Nancy B. can really show her colors. Throw money at it! "

Forward thinking wrote on May 9, 2008 7:52 AM:

" Thank you Mr. Selbrede for your forward thinking on this delicate subject. If you enter the words "Zero Tolerance" on Google, it takes less than 30 seconds to fill your screen with credible websites filled with reliable research by education and medical professionals verifying that ZERO TOLERANCE does not work. Just a little more time sitting at your computer will give you real solutions to these problems. Solutions that have proven to be effective. Zero Tolerance is, and never has been, a method with positive results. Let's start working together as a community, a school district, parents and students on these issues. Now that West Salem has a new school board, we need to clean the slate on the old policies and contribute to finding new and effective ways to reach our kids! "

Perhaps wrote on May 9, 2008 7:19 AM:

" the student could be "assigned" to some sort of public service for an extended period of time, in order to rechannel the student's interests, along with continuing his/her education. It could be either something the student is interested in, or depending on the offense, something he/she really doesn't want to do. Perhaps Lakeview, for example, could use some volunteers to work with people or just work in the kitchen or the grounds, again, depending on the student. "


The comments above are from readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Coulee News.

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