The People's Record

An ongoing chronicle of communities of resistance around the world: anti-racism, anti-zionism, anti-imperialism, the Arab Spring, anti-austerity protests in Greece and across Europe, student movements all around the world, the Occupy Movement, anti-capitalist movements, anarchist movements, socialist movements, leftist communities and other relevant international news.

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anarcho-queer:

1 Student Arrested Every Day In NYC Schools, 94% Are Black Or Latino
According to new data released by the NYPD [pdf], an average of one student is arrested every day in the city’s school system, and three others are issued summonses. During summer school from July through September, four students each day are arrested, and 94% of those arrested are black or Latino, and 83% are male. “The data raise concerns about black students being disproportionately arrested in the city’s schools,” Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the NYCLU says in a release. “If the Bloomberg administration is truly serious about closing the achievement gap, then they must address this disparity and focus more attention on educating children—not arresting them.”
The figures, which were released due to the passage of the Student Safety Act mostly cover summer school, and the law requires the NYPD to release numbers spanning from April 1 through June 30, which the department has still yet to do. While the Department of Education does not release the demographics of students in summer school, black and Latino students make up 85% of the students who score a 1 on the English Language Arts exam and 90% of the students who score a 1 on the mathematics exam in 8th grade. All students who score less than 2 are required to retake the exams in summer school.
54% of the summonses issued were for disorderly conduct, and 63% of all the summonses issued over the time period were handed out at schools in the Bronx and Queens. “Instead of arresting students who need the most help, the Bloomberg administration should redirect resources from police to services that support student achievement,” Udi Ofer, NYCLU’s advocacy director says. “Why are we employing 5,400 police personnel and only 3,000 guidance counselors?”
Related: Nearly 70% of NYC Public School Students Live In Poverty

I recently sat out some expired traffic tickets in a city jail near Dallas.
After having a few emotional flashbacks onset by guards who treated me in a way suspiciously similar to the way I was treated in public schools and after seeing countless people I had gone to school with, I came to the conclusion that the inmate population is pretty reflective of the public school population. I felt like I had spent 12 years in public school getting prepared for what to do when I finally went to jail. The school-to-prison-pipeline is a serious and growing problem. It’s systemic. It’s embedded in our urban school systems. It needs to be acknowledged and addressed.

anarcho-queer:

1 Student Arrested Every Day In NYC Schools, 94% Are Black Or Latino

According to new data released by the NYPD [pdf], an average of one student is arrested every day in the city’s school system, and three others are issued summonses. During summer school from July through September, four students each day are arrested, and 94% of those arrested are black or Latino, and 83% are male.The data raise concerns about black students being disproportionately arrested in the city’s schools,” Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the NYCLU says in a release.If the Bloomberg administration is truly serious about closing the achievement gap, then they must address this disparity and focus more attention on educating children—not arresting them.

The figures, which were released due to the passage of the Student Safety Act mostly cover summer school, and the law requires the NYPD to release numbers spanning from April 1 through June 30, which the department has still yet to do. While the Department of Education does not release the demographics of students in summer school, black and Latino students make up 85% of the students who score a 1 on the English Language Arts exam and 90% of the students who score a 1 on the mathematics exam in 8th grade. All students who score less than 2 are required to retake the exams in summer school.

54% of the summonses issued were for disorderly conduct, and 63% of all the summonses issued over the time period were handed out at schools in the Bronx and Queens. “Instead of arresting students who need the most help, the Bloomberg administration should redirect resources from police to services that support student achievement,” Udi Ofer, NYCLU’s advocacy director says. “Why are we employing 5,400 police personnel and only 3,000 guidance counselors?

Related: Nearly 70% of NYC Public School Students Live In Poverty

I recently sat out some expired traffic tickets in a city jail near Dallas.

After having a few emotional flashbacks onset by guards who treated me in a way suspiciously similar to the way I was treated in public schools and after seeing countless people I had gone to school with, I came to the conclusion that the inmate population is pretty reflective of the public school population. I felt like I had spent 12 years in public school getting prepared for what to do when I finally went to jail. The school-to-prison-pipeline is a serious and growing problem. It’s systemic. It’s embedded in our urban school systems. It needs to be acknowledged and addressed.

(via pragnacious)

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