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Education Week (May 18, 2005) reported that prekindergarten children
are being expelled from their classes for behavior problems at a higher rate than
students in K-12 schools. According to a study conducted by the Yale
University Child Study Center on 52 state-financed Pre-K programs in 40
states, for every 1,000 preschoolers enrolled in state pre-K programs, 6.67 are
being tossed out of school, compared with 2.09 per 1,000 students in elementary,
middle, and high schools. Other findings of the study:
* When teachers have access to mental-health professionals for consultation,
the chance that a child will be permanently removed from preschool is far less.
* Four year olds were 50 percent more likely to be ousted than two or three
year olds.
* Boys were expelled at a rate 4.5 times greater than the rate for girls.
* African American were twice as likely as Hispanic and white children to
be e xpelled and more than five times as likely to be expelled as Asian American
children.
* Expulsion rates are nearly twice as high in faith-based, for profit, and
other community-based programs than in Head Start and school-based
preschools.
For a link to the full report of the study, go to: www.edweek.org/links.
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