Abstract
In this article, I use ethnographic data to theorize about the causes of Black-White racial disparities in discipline at a “mostly White” middle school. Using critical race and institutional theories, I identify two racial discipline logics: criminalized sequestering and racial exemption. These logics differently governed how school leaders and teachers administered discipline among Black and White students and created a dual system that generated disparate outcomes. Overall, my analysis aids in understanding the organizational processes that produce Black-White racial discipline disparities, introduces new theoretical concepts for future research, and brings to the fore largely unexamined punitive, in-school discipline practices.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Wiley, K. E. (2021). A tale of two logics: School discipline and racial disparities in a “mostly white” middle school. American Journal of Education, 127(2), 163–192. https://doi.org/10.1086/712084
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