It will soon be more difficult for Minnesota teachers to remove young children from the classroom as punishment, under new laws that go into effect for nearly a third of public school students ahead of the new academic year.
The new statutes, which Gov. Tim Walz signed into law in May as part of a sweeping education bill, touch on disciplinary actions for students in kindergarten through third grade — ranging from recess detention up to suspension — and will require school officials across the state to revisit their policies before students and staff return to classrooms in the fall.
The laws regulate how and when educators may use recess detention as a punishment for young students. Such a punishment may only be dispatched if a pupil is "likely to cause serious physical harm to other students or staff" or if a parent grants school leaders permission to deny the child playtime. Elementary educators may not eject students from a classroom as punishment for truancy or tardiness.
In addition, schools will have to develop a process for parents to officially complain about disciplinary actions.
"The system we have in place will need to change," Anoka-Hennepin School District spokesman Jim Skelly said. "There's no doubt about that."
Inequity spurred new laws
Rep. Ruth Richardson, DFL-Mendota Heights, said the disparities in school discipline data the Minnesota Department of Human Rights reported last year show the new provisions are needed. The agency found that while students of color comprised just under half of all enrollment in the state's public schools, they made up 4 in 5 disciplinary cases.
The statistics were even more stark for students with disabilities, who made up 59% of discipline cases but just 14% of enrollment.