
Public school suspension rates are down in London, but disruptive behaviour is way up, educators say
CBC
The Thames Valley District School Board doesn't suspend students as often as it used to before the pandemic, but educators say that doesn't mean violence and disruptive behaviour have decreased.
In fact, they say the opposite is true.
CBC News spoke to the unions representing elementary and secondary school teachers, as well as support staff and educational assistants following the release of a report this week that shows suspension rates have dropped overall at the school board, most significantly at the elementary school level, in Grades 4-8.
The board reports the numbers as a percentage rate based on enrolment. In 2022-2023, the most recent school year for which data is available, when there were approximately 82,000 students, the school board suspended five per cent of students. That was down from a pre-pandemic high of seven per cent in the 2018-2019 school year, at a time when there were fewer students enrolled.
The provincial suspension rate in both 2018-2019 and in 2022-2023 was four per cent.
Despite those numbers, educators in London are reporting feeling unsafe in schools as they deal with kids and teens who have missed vital developmental milestones and have trouble regulating their emotions and behaviours.
"It's not that the violence isn't there, it's not that the behaviours aren't there. It just means there's a policy or practice that we're no longer suspending students," said Rebecca Avey, president of CUPE Local 7575, which represents educational assistants with the public school board.
"The whole problem is, we're just triaging and just surviving. We don't have the time to stop and think. It's hard when you're in the middle of a dumpster fire to reflect on what might work."
In 2019, then-director of education Mark Fisher vowed to reduce the school board's suspension rates, which were higher than the provincial average especially at the elementary level. In 2018-2019, about 2.5 per cent of kids were suspended, but in Thames Valley 7.3 per cent of kids were suspended.
In 2022-2023, the provincial number is unchanged but the Thames Valley number has dipped to four per cent.
Fisher introduced progressive discipline, and asked teachers and principals to try new ways of intervening in situations before suspending students.
But student behaviour is a growing concern, said John Bernans, the president of the union that represents high school teachers. "How are we correcting the behaviour, if we're not suspending? I think teachers are frustrated with the lack of effective tools."