Ohio boy suspended for pointing finger like a gun. 鈥榋ero tolerance鈥 run amok?
Officials at Devonshire Alternative Elementary School in Ohio said Nathan Entingh, 10, formed his hand into a 'level 2 lookalike gun.' But critics say zero tolerance policies punish imaginative play.
Officials at Devonshire Alternative Elementary School in Ohio said Nathan Entingh, 10, formed his hand into a 'level 2 lookalike gun.' But critics say zero tolerance policies punish imaginative play.
The suspension last week of an Ohio fifth-grader who formed his hand into the shape of a gun and pointed his finger 鈥渆xecution-style鈥 at a classmate is fueling the debate over whether school administrators under pressure to keep schools safe are punishing students excessively for imaginative play.
Officials at Devonshire Alternative Elementary School defended their decision to suspend 10-year-old Nathan Entingh, whose hand they designated as a 鈥渓evel 2 lookalike gun.鈥 Gun play at the school had become a problem, they said, and students and parents had been warned against it.
But the three-day suspension is already fodder for a movement in several state legislatures that seeks to force school officials to let up on what many parents and educators see as the overzealous prosecution of 鈥渮ero tolerance鈥 policies that bypass common sense and hurt children by punishing healthy imaginations and play.
Since the 1994 Gun-Free Schools Act mandated 鈥渮ero tolerance鈥 for students bringing guns to school, school officials have expanded that basic notion to include gun play with toy guns, food shaped into guns, and, now, in Ohio, even hand gestures. Recent school shootings, including the Sandy Hook massacre in December 2012, have ratcheted up tensions 鈥 and principals鈥 sensitivities.
At the same time, institutions ranging from large school districts in Buffalo and Oakland to the US Department of Justice are pushing for lesser punishments than suspension and expulsion, especially since research in the last decade has shown that such drastic measures are themselves risk factors for a student鈥檚 reduced engagement in school, dropping out, even involvement with the juvenile justice system.
鈥淎 kid putting his finger in the shape of a gun and pointing it another kid, that鈥檚 inappropriate and there鈥檚 no question that something happens as a result of that,鈥 says Russell Skiba, an education professor and discipline expert at Indiana University, at Bloomington. 鈥淏ut there are probably 20 different options that are short of sending a kid home for this type of incident.鈥
鈥淚nstead,鈥 he says, 鈥渨e鈥檝e seen literally thousands upon thousands of incidents where local school districts have lost common sense and extended the notion of the Gun Free Schools Act of not allowing real firearms on school grounds to levels that most of us would consider fairly ridiculous.鈥
Around the country, there鈥檚 been a steady march of cases where students, sometimes barely kindergarten age, have been punished for toy guns.
In Maryland, a school district punished a student for chewing a Pop-Tart into the shape of a gun, and in Virginia, a school district suspended a boy for playing with a toy gun near a bus stop 鈥 which happened to be in his own front yard. In Pennsylvania, a 5-year-old was suspended for making 鈥渢erroristic threats鈥 with a bubble gun.
In January, officials at Frederick Funston Elementary School in Chicago suspended a sixth-grader after he voluntarily handed over a toy gun he had forgotten was in his pocket.
Lawmakers in several states, including Texas, Maryland, and Ohio, have introduced bills to curb such outsized punishments.
鈥淚f there's no real intent, there's no real threat, no real weapon, no real harm is occurring or going to occur, why in the world are we in a sense abusing our children like this?鈥 Sally Kern, a Republican state legislator from Oklahoma, told Fox News.
Representative Kern recently introduced the Common Sense Zero Tolerance Act to waive punishment for students possessing small toy weapons or using pencils or their fingers to simulate a weapon.
Though Mr. Skiba, the discipline expert, believes that the nation 鈥渉as turned a corner鈥 and has begun to move away from the 鈥渮ero tolerance mindset,鈥 the idea is still deeply entrenched in American education.
In a recent survey of Indiana principals, one in three said they believe 鈥渮ero tolerance鈥 is critical to both school safety and sending disciplinary messages to students, and teachers unions are pushing back against lawmakers who want such punishments stopped.
Other educators, however, suggest that school officials need to exhibit more humility when it comes to discipline mistakes.
鈥淥ur sensitivities are just too high and we need to back off a little bit and take a look at what our real safety plan is,鈥 Mark Terry, a Texas principal and president of the National Association of Elementary School Principals, told the Associated Press last year. 鈥淎nd if we make a mistake, we need to apologize.鈥
School administrators in Florida had to heed that advice the last time a student was punished for making a hand gun. Last year, the Osceloa School Board in St. Cloud, Fla., rescinded a suspension and apologized for punishing 8-year-old Jordan Bennett who made a gun with his hand in class.