Indiana schools suspended students over 30,000 times for fighting last year

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Indiana schools suspended more students in the years after the pandemic than at any point in the prior decade, but state leaders have not prioritized the spike in exclusionary discipline—leaving thousands of children missing out on class with little oversight of how discipline is applied.

Last school year, about 72,700 public school students—or nearly 7% of those enrolled— experienced out-of-school suspensions. That was lower than the peak the prior year, but remains higher than before the pandemic. State data obtained by WFYI show that the increase was largely driven by more suspensions for fighting and drug-related offenses.

The data also reveal stark disparities. Black students were suspended more than three times as often as their white peers, while students with disabilities were removed from school more than twice as often as those without.

Read more at WFYI.

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