Handcuffs, Leg Shackles and Tasers: The New Face of Punishment in the Public Schools

Guest Post by John W. Whitehead

“In many parts of the country, teachers are viewed as beyond reproach, much like doctors, police officers, or clergy … and, therefore, are rarely challenged about their classroom conduct. In some cases, this means that actions that would be considered criminal if committed by a parent remain unchallenged by law enforcement if they occur in a school setting.”Senator Tom Harkin, “Dangerous Use of Seclusion and Restraints in Schools Remains Widespread and Difficult to Remedy: A Review of Ten Cases

Roughly 1500 kids are tied up or locked down every day by school officials in the United States.

At least 500 students are locked up in some form of solitary confinement every day, whether it be a padded room, a closet or a duffel bag. In many cases, parents are rarely notified when such methods are used.

On any given day when school is in session, kids who “act up” in class are pinned facedown on the floor, locked in dark closets, tied up with straps, bungee cords and duct tape, handcuffed, leg shackled, tasered or otherwise restrained, immobilized or placed in solitary confinement in order to bring them under “control.”

In almost every case, these undeniably harsh methods are used to punish kids for simply failing to follow directions or throwing tantrums. Very rarely do the kids pose any credible danger to themselves or others.

Unbelievably, these tactics are all legal, at least when employed by school officials or school resource officers (a.k.a. police officers) in the nation’s public schools.

For example, in what may be the youngest example of a child being restrained in this way, in October 2014, a 4-year-old Virginia preschooler was handcuffed, leg shackled and transported to the sheriff’s office after reportedly throwing blocks and climbing on top of the furniture. School officials claim the restraints were necessary to protect the adults from injury.

In New York, “school safety agents” tied a 5-year-old ADHD student to a chair with Velcro straps as a punishment for throwing a tantrum in class. Police officers claim the straps were necessary because the boy had tried to bite one of the adults.

A 6-year-old kindergarten student in a Georgia public school was handcuffed, transported to the police station, and charged with simple battery of a schoolteacher and criminal damage to property for throwing a temper tantrum at school.

A second-grader in Arizona who suffers from ADHD was duct-taped to her chair after getting up to sharpen her pencil too often.

Kentucky school officials placed a 9-year-old autistic student in a duffel bag as a punishment acting up in class. Turns out, it wasn’t the first time the boy had been placed inside the “therapy bag.”

An 11-year-old special needs student had his hands cuffed behind his back and was driven home in a police car after refusing to come inside after recess and acting in an out of control manner by “passively” resisting police officers.

Unfortunately, these are far from isolated incidents.

According to a ProPublica investigative report, such harsh punishments are part of a widespread phenomenon plaguing school districts across the country.

Indeed, as investigative reporter Heather Vogell points out, this is a local story everywhere. It’s happening in my town. It’s happening in your town. It’s happening in every school district in America.

In 2012 alone, there were more than 267,000 attempts by school officials to restrain or lock up students using straps, bungee cords, and duct tape. The numbers are likely far greater when one accounts for the schools that underreport their use of such tactics.

Vogell found that “most [incidents] of restraints and seclusions happen to kids with disabilities—and are more likely to happen to kids with autism or emotional/behavioral problems.” Often due to their age, their emotional distress, or their disabilities, these young people are unable to tell their parents about the abusive treatment being meted out to them by school officials.

At least 500 students are placed in “Scream Rooms” every day (there were 104,000 reported uses of scream rooms in a given year). For those unfamiliar with the term, a “scream room” is an isolated, unmonitored, locked room—sometimes padded, often as small as four-feet-by-four-feet—which school officials use to place students in seclusion.

These scream rooms are a far cry from the tested and approved “time out,” which involves monitoring the child in a non-locked setting in order to calm him down. As psychiatrist Keith Albow points out, “Scream rooms are nothing but solitary confinement, and by extension, that makes every school that uses them a prison. They turn principals into wardens and make every student an inmate.”

Schools acting like prisons. School officials acting like wardens. Students treated like inmates and punished like hardened criminals.

This is the end product of all those so-called school “safety” policies, which run the gamut from zero tolerance policies that punish all infractions harshly to surveillance cameras, metal detectors, random searches, drug-sniffing dogs, school-wide lockdowns, active-shooter drills and militarized police officers.

Paradoxically, instead of making the schools safer, school officials have succeeded in creating an environment in which children are so traumatized that they suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, nightmares, anxiety, mistrust of adults in authority, as well as feelings of anger, depression, humiliation, despair and delusion.

Even in the face of parental outrage, lawsuits, legislative reforms, investigative reports and endless cases showing that these tactics are not working and “should never be used for punishment or discipline,” full-grown adults—police officers and teachers alike—insist that the reason they continue to handcuff, lock up and restrain little kids is because they fear for their safety and the safety of others.

“Fear for one’s safety” has become such a hackneyed and threadbare excuse for behavior that is inexcusable. Dig a little deeper and you’ll find that explanation covers a multitude of sins, whether it’s poorly trained police officers who shoot first and ask questions later, or school officials who are ill-equipped to deal with children who act like children, meaning they don’t always listen, they sometimes throw tantrums, and they have a hard time sitting still.

That’s not to say all schools are bad. In fact, there are a small but growing number of schools that are proactively switching to a policy of Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports (PBIS), which relies on the use of “engaging instruction, combined with acknowledgement or feedback of positive student behavior,” in order to reduce the need for unnecessary discipline and promote a climate of greater productivity, safety, and learning.  One school in Pennsylvania for children with significant behavior challenges found that they were able to “reduce the use of physical restraint from approximately 1,000 incidents per year in 1998 to only three incidents total in 2012” after switching to a PBIS-oriented program. If exposed to this positive reinforcement early enough in school, by the time a student makes it to the third grade, little to no intervention is required.

Unfortunately, these schools are still in the minority in an age that values efficiency, expediency and conformity, where it’s often faster and easier to “lock down” a kid who won’t sit still, won’t follow orders, and won’t comply.

Certainly, this is a mindset we see all too often in the American police state.

So what’s the answer, not only for the here-and-now—the children growing up in these quasi-prisons—but for the future of this country? How do you convince a child who has been routinely handcuffed, shackled, tied down, locked up, and immobilized by government officials—all before he reaches the age of adulthood—that he has any rights at all, let alone the right to challenge wrongdoing, resist oppression and defend himself against injustice?

Most of all, as I point out in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, how do you persuade a fellow American that the government works for him when for most of his young life, he has been incarcerated in an institution that teaches young people to be obedient and compliant citizens who don’t talk back, don’t question and don’t challenge authority?

Peter Gray, a professor of psychology at Boston College, believes that school is a prison that is damaging our kids, and it’s hard to disagree, especially with the numbers of police officers being assigned to schools on the rise. What this means, notes Mother Jones, is greater police “involvement in routine discipline matters that principals and parents used to address without involvement from law enforcement officers.”

Students, in turn, are not only finding themselves subjected to police tactics such as handcuffs, leg shackles, tasers and excessive force for “acting up” but are also being ticketed, fined and sent to court for behavior perceived as defiant, disruptive or disorderly such as spraying perfume and writing on a desk.

Clearly, the pathology that characterizes the American police state has passed down to the schools. Now in addition to the government and its agents viewing the citizenry as suspects to be probed, poked, pinched, tasered, searched, seized, stripped and generally manhandled, all with the general blessing of the court, our children in the public schools are also fair game.

What can be done?

Without a doubt, change is needed, but that will mean taking on the teachers’ unions, the school unions, the educators’ associations, and the police unions, not to mention the politicians dependent on their votes and all of the corporations that profit mightily from an industrial school complex.

As we’ve seen with other issues, any significant reforms will have to start locally and trickle upwards. For a start, parents need to be vocal, visible and organized and demand that school officials 1) adopt a policy of positive reinforcement in dealing with behavior issues; 2) minimize the presence in the schools of police officers and cease involving them in student discipline; and 3) insist that all behavioral issues be addressed first and foremost with a child’s parents, before any other disciplinary tactics are attempted.

“Children are the messages we send to a time we will not see,” Professor Neil Postman once wrote. If we do not rein in the police state’s influence in the schools, the future to which we are sending our children will be characterized by a brutal, totalitarian regime.

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16 Comments
Hope@ZeroKelvin
Hope@ZeroKelvin
January 27, 2015 10:06 am

Is there any real difference between public education and prison? I mean both are compulsory, the individual has no control/input into the “curriculum” and the meals, and infractions bring down the maximum punishment.

Is the exposure of children to the public school experience more, or less, as salubrious as the exposure of people to the conditions in prison?

Seriously, I spent most my public school years finishing my so-called work in about 15 minutes and reading Tolkien for about the umpteenth time. I could have done the material in K-12 in half the time, and that was in the 60s-70s before the real dumbing down of the curriculum occurred.

Yup, public school = prison. No difference.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 27, 2015 10:55 am

During my 4 years in high school I can remember only two fights between students .They were all.padded by the principal . No more fighting. No guns , knives , baseball bats or any other weapons were used. Never saw bullying of any kind.A lot of playing around but nothing to serious. We had girls and muscle cars on our minds most of the time. Last time I went back to my home town they were two cops cars out front of the high school .I found out they now keep at least one cop there all the time .Especially during school hours to keep students from killing each other. Sad.

bb
bb
January 27, 2015 10:56 am

Anonymous is bb again .

Dutchman
Dutchman
January 27, 2015 10:57 am

Both my wife and I suffered through government school- 50’s and 60’s. First, it’s an antiquated system, based on production lines. Then there are the teachers – people who have never had a real job except being a government employee.

We homeschooled our daughter.

Although government schools are highly ineffective (especially for the cost and the result), nothing seems to ‘stick’ on them. The worse they do, the more money they get. Then every couple of years they invent a ‘new’ teaching method – what a load of BS.

So public education has morphed into an employment / retirement program for a lot of people: teachers, administrators, buildings and grounds, maintenance, bus drivers, bus mechanics.

It’s really nothing more than a babysitting service and a brainwash for liberal ideas, and to introduce the idea that you will be a subservient wage slave in a cube farm.

Stucky
Stucky
January 27, 2015 11:15 am

1. Don’t have kids.

2. If you do have kids … for the love of God!!! … do NOT send them to gubment skool !!!!!

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Stucky
Stucky
January 27, 2015 11:44 am

This entire fuckin country is a prison, essentially.
===================================

Man cited in Georgia for eating cheeseburger while driving

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

MARIETTA, Ga. — A man says he was cited by police outside Atlanta for eating a cheeseburger while driving.

Madison Turner, who’s from Alabama, tells Atlanta station WSB-TV he ordered a double quarter-pounder with cheese from a McDonald’s in the Marietta area shortly before he was pulled over last week.

Turner says the officer told him he saw him eating the cheeseburger for two miles, telling the man “You can’t just go down the road eating a hamburger.”

The ticket, issued under Georgia’s distracted driving law, states in the comments section that the offense is “eating while driving.”

Turner is to appear in court Feb. 3.

Cobb County police spokesman Mike Bowman declined comment.

Dutchman
Dutchman
January 27, 2015 11:48 am

@Stucky: I can’t believe these people who have kids, send them to daycare, then to public school until they’re 18. People treat their pets better than this.

starfcker
starfcker
January 27, 2015 12:37 pm

Articles like this make me ill. Total bullshit to lump some of these feral africans as ”children’. We need separate but equal. Quick. Hey whitehead, you keep saying ‘parents’, plural. Are you unaware that most black kids don’t have two parents? Take africans out of your numbers, or simply enforce the same standards of behavior, and (like 90% of social ills) the problem becomes moot.. disclaimer: I never met billy in my life

Dutchman
Dutchman
January 27, 2015 1:27 pm

@starfcker: I don’t think you ‘get it’. Yes there are out of control feral neegrows. But that’s not the problem. The problem is that government schools are a prison for all the children.

starfcker
starfcker
January 27, 2015 1:33 pm

Bitch slapped in 5 minutes. Ok, but here is my point. I see these kind of cases on my local news all the time. Scumbag law rat, ebonics momma ‘they discilpine my chile!!’, there is always accusations of racism. Always. EZ answer. Take whitey out of the situation. Let a black teacher taze the kids. Let a black cop shoot (or get killed by) mike brown. Let a black man write the math test. Problem solved.

yahsure
yahsure
January 27, 2015 1:39 pm

My boy got the flu and my daughter got head lice.All in one week. I am not sure who i hate more,the school or the stupid parents who send their sick filthy kids to school.

starfcker
starfcker
January 27, 2015 1:41 pm

Dutch, maybe I don’t get it, but if you get that element out of that school, maybe it doesn’t need to be a prison

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
January 27, 2015 5:20 pm

strfckr, the reason schools are like prisons is to condition the kids to accept control and not question authority. Color has nothing to do with it. Take the blacks out and they will still have metal detectors, searches and unreasonable rules and even more unreasonable punishments.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
January 27, 2015 5:21 pm

Dutchman says:
“I can’t believe these people who have kids, send them to daycare, then to public school until they’re 18. People treat their pets better than this. ”

I treat my dogs better than that for sure.

bb
bb
January 27, 2015 5:57 pm

IS ,color has nothing to do with …..are you out of your fucking mind ?One example , my aunt was a school teacher for 35+years She says in all those years 90% of the problems were because of black students who would or could not learn to do basic course work .So they behaved like animals.(her words )She finally became so disgusted she got her masters degree so she could teach smarter students who were preparing for college.
IS ,I was not born in the south but live there now .Blacks are a fucking parasitic disease upon society. Just in a city like Charlotte NC.There would be very little violent crimes if blacks were removed from society. Every time you turn on tv it’s a black involved in violent crime.These are just two examples.If you or the teachers or cops try to correct their behavior they cry racism like clockwork. If I never saw another God damn black face that would be fine with me.

Llpoh
Llpoh
January 27, 2015 5:57 pm

I am with starfcker on this. Can you imagine the shear number of feral animals out there in the public school system? Have a walk around a mall and see how many of the little shits behave.

I have seen more than one little 4 year old shitbag that needs to be shackled and cuffed. If you happen to say “stop kicking me” to the little angel, the little shitbag’s mother or dad gets in your face, threatening and snarling. They think the little shitbag should be able to do as they please. Wonder how these little fucks behave in school.

I was just about run down by two little animals in the store not long ago. Dad had let them push their own cart – at a full run. They just missed me, and he was just a few yards away, and said not a word. I went up to him and said “If they had hit me with that cart, I would have beaten the fuck out of you”. He had the good sense, after he got over the shock of it, not to say a frigging word in reply.

Yes, some of these teachers/administrators get it totally wrong. But make no mistake, lots of these little animals need to be caged. It is their parents’ fault. They should be caged with them.