In Pennsylvania the Department of Corrections recently agreed not to use solitary confinement on death row inmates. In Illinois, school districts use a form of solitary confinement on students, often very young students with disabilities, according to the Chicago Tribune.
The spaces have gentle names: The reflection room. The
cool-down room. The calming room. The quiet room.
But shut inside them, in public schools across the state,
children as young as 5 wail for their parents, scream in anger and beg to be
let out.
The students, most of them with disabilities, scratch the
windows or tear at the padded walls. They throw their bodies against locked
doors. They wet their pants. Some children spend hours inside these rooms,
missing class time. Through it all, adults stay outside the door, writing down
what happens.
In Illinois, it’s legal for school employees to seclude
students in a separate space — to put them in “isolated timeout” — if the
students pose a safety threat to themselves or others. Yet every school day,
workers isolate children for reasons that violate the law, an investigation by
the Chicago Tribune and ProPublica Illinois has found.
Children were sent to isolation after refusing to do
classwork, for swearing, for spilling milk, for throwing Legos. School
employees use isolated timeout for convenience, out of frustration or as
punishment, sometimes referring to it as “serving time.”
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