While
numerous studies have demonstrated a correlation between exclusionary
discipline and negative student outcomes, this relationship is likely
confounded by other factors related to the underlying misbehavior or
risk of disciplinary referral. Using 10 years of student-level
demographic, achievement, and disciplinary data from all K–12 public
schools in Arkansas, this study finds that exclusionary consequences are related
to worse academic outcomes (e.g., test scores and grade retention) than
less exclusionary consequences, controlling for type of behavioral
infraction. However, despite controlling for a robust set of covariates,
sensitivity checks demonstrate that the estimated relationships between
consequences and academic outcomes may still be driven by selection
bias into consequence type.
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