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Social Construction of School Punishment: Racial Disadvantage Out of Universalistic Process

NCJ Number
109281
Journal
Social Forces Volume: 65 Issue: 4 Dated: (June 1987) Pages: 1101-1120
Author(s)
J D McCarthy; D R Hoge
Date Published
1987
Length
20 pages
Annotation
Black adolescents are much more likely to run afoul of the juvenile justice system than are similar white adolescents, even though the two groups self-report similar rates of offending.
Abstract
Within public schools, the same differential pattern is found. Using three wave of longitudinal data collected in schools, the authors evaluate several explanations for disparity. The greater rates of punishment for blacks occur as a consequence of teachers' perceptions of the student's behavior, their knowledge of students' recent academic performance, and their knowledge of student's past record of being sanctioned. Since black adolescents in the sample received poorer grades and were rated as less well behaved in the past, they were more likely to have been sanctioned and therefore to acquire a cumulative disadvantage. The punishment disparity is best understood as the result of a social construction process. (Publisher abstract modified)