Cradle-to-Prison Pipeline

Everett B. Singleton
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Abstract

Youth who experience academic failure are at a greater risk for involvement in delinquency. While studies have revealed a myriad of factors for such failure, the perceptions of these youth regarding their educational experiences have proven to be one of the most valuable resources regarding the systematic barriers to academic achievement. The purpose of this essay is to examine how youth of color are overwhelming affected by a phenomenon known as Cradle-to-Prison Pipeline. Several school districts in the U. S. employ harsh discipline practices that inevitably push students out of classrooms, on the streets, and in the juvenile justice system at an astounding rate. Students of color experience higher rates of suspensions, expulsion, truancy, retention, and academic failure in schools. Harsh discipline polices, along with bias and discrimination have a direct or indirect impact on their academic journey, including feeling of inferiority due to their academic shortcomings. *The original version of this article included the term Native Indigenous students.  Per the authors request, the term Native Indigenous has been replaced with Indigenous.  
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Cradle-to-Prison管道
经历过学业失败的青少年有更大的犯罪风险。虽然研究揭示了造成这种失败的无数因素,但这些年轻人对其教育经历的看法已被证明是关于学业成就的系统性障碍的最有价值的资源之一。这篇文章的目的是研究有色人种的年轻人是如何被一种被称为“从摇篮到监狱管道”的现象所影响的。美国的一些学区采用严厉的纪律措施,不可避免地将学生赶出教室,流落街头,并以惊人的速度进入少年司法系统。有色人种学生在学校的停学、开除、逃学、留校和学业不及格的比例更高。严厉的纪律政策,以及偏见和歧视对他们的学术之旅产生了直接或间接的影响,包括因学术缺点而产生的自卑感。*这篇文章的原始版本包括术语土著学生。根据作者的要求,将“土著居民”一词改为“土著居民”。
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