At alarming rates, Black girls, and other girls of color, experience discriminatory, disparate, punitive and unfair treatment in schools. Black girls are suspended, expelled, referred to law enforcement and arrested on school campus at rates that far exceed the public school population as a whole, and far exceed their white female peers. According to the most recent U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights Data, Black girls are 7 times more likely to be suspended from school, and 4 times more likely to be arrested on school campus. Punitive practices and policies in schools fuel systemic inequities and outcomes based on race and gender, and have profound consequences for Black girls: rather than promote safety and well-being, these practices disproportionately push Black girls out of school and further into the margins. Black girls who have been subject to punitive school policies and practices are at an increased risk of coming in contact with the juvenile and criminal courts and leaving school altogether, ultimately impeding their ability to achieve future success and lead successful and healthy lives. Source
For $25, join us for a dinner and screening of Pushout: A Criminilization of Black Girls in Schools, followed by a panel discussion.
Moderator:
Regina Lester-Harriat, LMSW, MSW '08
Panelists:
Dr. Christiana Best-Giacomini, Ph.D, LMSW
Yvette Young, LPC
Barbie Nadal-Cristofaro, MSW '16
Donna Mims, B.S.
Please kindly RSVP by Friday, February 21, 2020
Unfortunately, we've reached capacity and online registration for this event is currently closed. For additional information or to be added to a waitlist, please contact Abigail G. Jackson viaemail.