March certainly held true to the “in like a lion, out like a lamb” saying this year. With spring flowers popping up all over town and the recent warm weather, it’s hard to believe we were battling snow and ice just a few weeks ago.
It’s also hard to believe the Washougal girls basketball team was celebrating its first-ever 2A state tournament win in early March when the team’s superstar player, Beyonce Bea, is now putting on her tennis whites and helping the Washougal girls tennis team smash its way to victory. Our first March cheers obviously belongs to the Washougal girls basketball team players and their head coach, Britney Knotts.
The second cheers goes to the Washougal School District for its commitment to helping all students succeed and reevaluating discipline policies that often punish students who need school the most. According to an article in our March 21 issue, the district’s new procedures and policies aim to “decrease the number of students who have multiple, reoccurring disciplinary incidents such as suspensions; and the disproportionality of incidents in regard to student mix.”
The district has been focusing its efforts on evidence-based policies that have shown success in lowering the disproportionate number of students of color, male students, lower-income students and special needs students who are spending time out of school or class due to suspensions and expulsions as well as trips to the principal’s or vice principal’s office for behavior issues.
At a time when the United States Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos has gutted Obama-era protections designed to make sure students of color were no longer being disciplined at higher rates than their peers, it is encouraging to see the Washougal district pursue measures that will ensure justice for all students.