Chair of the Board Dr. Steven Isoye (2023) | Illinois State Board of education
Chair of the Board Dr. Steven Isoye (2023) | Illinois State Board of education
During the same period, Bond County Community Unit 2 High School's 482 white students, who make up 89.8% of the school population, received 93 suspensions. This translates to an average of roughly one suspension per five white students, which is definitively lower than that of Black students, making them the best-behaved racial group in the school.
Of the 115 total suspensions at Bond County Community Unit 2 High School in the 2021-22 school year, 82 were in-school suspensions and 33 out-of-school suspensions.
During the 2021-22 school year, Bond County Community Unit 2 High School reported 74 students - equivalent to 13.8% of its student body - as chronically truant, meaning they had a repeated pattern of unexcused lateness or missing classes. In addition, 148 students, or 27.5% of the student population, fell into the chronically absent category, a broader measure that includes all absences, excused or not.
In a broader context, data from the ProPublica database indicates that Black students are suspended at a rate 4.6 times higher than white students in Illinois—surpassing the already high national average rate of 3.9 times.
However, districts’ officials deny a direct link between these statistics and race. Lisa Small, the Superintendent of District 211, argues that these numbers oversimplify the situation. “Decisions are highly individualized and based on the specific behavior and are not well-suited to a simple numerical analysis,” she wrote in a statement. “They are not a statistic to us, but a developing young adult.”
Illinois ranks 12th in the nation for the highest rate of suspensions among Black students relative to their white peers.
Race | Number of Students | Total Infractions | Infractions Per Student |
---|---|---|---|
Black | 10 | 11 | 1.1 |
Multiracial | 28 | 11 | 0.39 |
White | 482 | 93 | 0.19 |