Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
354528 Economics of Education Review 2011 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

At state and national levels, black students are more likely to be suspended from school, and conditional on misbehavior, receive stiffer penalties when compared with white students. Racial bias is often cited as a primary contributor to these gaps. Using infraction data from North Carolina, I investigate gaps in punishment within and across schools, and explore how student–teacher and student–principal race interactions affect discipline. I find a significant statewide gap in discipline that is largely generated by cross-school variation in punishment. In addition, there is little evidence that black students are treated differentially according to teacher or principal race.

► Black and white students are disciplined unequally across the state of North Carolina. ► Within schools, however, black and white students are equally likely to be suspended and receive the same suspension lengths conditional on observed behavior. ► The cross-school variation in discipline that generates the aggregate discipline disparities does not appear to be related to the race of the principal.

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Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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