@EdWorkingPaper{ai24-950, title = "Ending Early Grade Suspensions", author = "Ezra Karger, Sarah Komisarow", institution = "Annenberg Institute at Brown University", number = "950", year = "2024", month = "May", URL = "http://www.edworkingpapers.com/ai24-950", abstract = {We investigate the beginning of the school discipline pipeline using a reform in Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools that limited the use of out-of- school suspension for students in grades K–2. We find that the reform reduced the likelihood of out-of-school suspension by 1.4 percentage points (56%) and had precise null effects on test scores and disciplinary infractions. This leads us to reject a key argument in favor of early-grade suspensions: namely, that early-grade suspensions improve classroom- level outcomes. For high-risk students, we find short-run increases in test scores that persist into third grade. The reform reduced the Black- white out-of-school suspension gap by 79%.}, }