The Zero Tolerance Policy: Justified or Unreasonable?

2053 Words5 Pages

The zero tolerance policy has become a national controversy in regards to the solid proven facts that it criminalizes children and seems to catch kids who have no intention of doing harm. Although, there has been substantial evidence to prove that the policies enforced in many schools have gone far beyond the extreme to convict children of their wrongdoing. The punishments for the act of misconduct have reached a devastating high, and have pointed students in the wrong direction. Despite the opinions of administrators and parents, as well as evidence that zero tolerance policies have deterred violence in many public and private schools, the rules of conviction and punishment are unreasonable and should be modified.

Lawmakers and school officials have been wearisome in the efforts of finding a policy that works to make our schools a safer place for students and administrators. Schools, both public and private, are an environment for learning and pleasant experiences that a child or adolescent will remember for the rest of their lives. Although, experiences like the Columbine High school massacres are not what an individual would want to remember and is one of the most significant enforcer when it comes to all austere policies. Zero tolerance was first introduced by President Ronald Reagan’s

Toma 2

administration as part of their enactment of the War on Drugs initiation. Several schools embraced the policy as a way of deterring drugs on their campuses. Although when the policy became a law when Drug-Free Schools and Campuses Act of 1989 was passed by congress (Wattleton). For countless amount of years, hundreds of schools began to adopt the policy as part of their regulations when it came to the punishment of a student. The ...

... middle of paper ...

... Inc., 2009. 254. Print.

Kajs, Lawrence. "Education Research Quarterly." Academic

Premier. N.p., june 2006. Web. 12 Apr 2011.

Lorenz, Aaron. "Public Integrity." 12.3 (2010): n. pag. Web. 10

Apr 2011.

Shelden, Randall. Schools As "Day Prisons" and "Zero

Tolerance" Policies. Boston: 2009. 289-91. Print.

Toma 9

Skiba, Russell. Zero Tolerance, Zero Evidence. 1st Ed.

Indiana: Brown, 2000. eBook.

Stovall, David, and Natalia Delgado. "New Directions for

Youth Development." 2.125 Aug 2009. 67-81. EBSCO Host.

Database. 27 Feb 2011.

Wattie, Chris. "Water Balloon Hijinks result in assault charge;

Teacher 'was wet'." National Post. Canwest, 24 Jul 2001.

Web. 5 Apr 2011.

Wattleton, Alyce. "Zero Tolerance - Further Readings."

American Law and Legal Information. Net Industries, 2011.

Web. 18 Apr 2011.

More about The Zero Tolerance Policy: Justified or Unreasonable?

Open Document