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School Has Become Too Hostile To Boys

Christina Hoff Summers writing for Time:

As school begins in the coming weeks, parents of boys should ask themselves a question: Is my son really welcome? A flurry of incidents last spring suggests that the answer is no.

In May, Christopher Marshall, age 7, was suspended from his Virginia school for picking up a pencil and using it to “shoot” a “bad guy” — his friend, who was also suspended. A few months earlier, Josh Welch, also 7, was sent home from his Maryland school for nibbling off the corners of a strawberry Pop-Tart to shape it into a gun. At about the same  time, Colorado’s Alex Evans, age 7, was suspended for throwing an imaginary hand grenade at “bad guys” in order to “save the world.”

In all these cases, school officials found the children to be in violation of the school’s zero-tolerance policies for firearms, which is clearly a ludicrous  application of the rule. But common sense isn’t the only thing at stake here. In the name of zero tolerance, our schools are becoming hostile environments for young boys.

Girls occasionally run afoul of these draconian policies; but it is mostly  boys who are ensnared. Boys are nearly five times more likely to be expelled from  preschool than girls. In grades K-12, boys account for nearly 70% of suspensions, often for  minor acts of insubordination and defiance. In the cases of Christopher, Josh  and Alex, there was no insubordination or defiance whatsoever. They were guilty  of nothing more than being typical 7-year-old boys. But in today’s school  environment, that can be a punishable offense.

Zero tolerance was originally conceived as a way of ridding schools of  violent predators, especially in the wake of horrific shootings in places like  Littleton, Colo. But juvenile violence, including violence at schools, is at a historic low.

Read the full article.

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