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We tracked 72,000 NSW public school students over a decade and found 19% had been suspended or expelled

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Suspending or expelling a student is the most serious disciplinary measure available to schools.

Research tells us it can have a negative impact on a , their and .

Students who have been suspended are also more likely to go on to have contact with the due to lack of adult supervision, association with older antisocial peers, and negative impacts on essential skills like reading.

This is why student discipline say they should only be used as a last resort.

But how are schools using these measures?

In a , we tracked New South Wales public school students over a decade. We found many students were repeatedly suspended. We also found disadvantaged students were more likely to be suspended or expelled.

Our research

Our used data from the to track and expulsions among a group of almost 72,000 students who attended in New South Wales. This represented almost one-fifth of all Australian school students at the time.

It provides the first, large-scale analysis of suspension and expulsion data over a 10-year period, following the same students from Year 3 to Year 12, from 2012 to 2021.

Almost 1 in 5 students were suspended during their school career

According to the , about 4% of students in the state's public schools are suspended or expelled in any calendar year.

But these figures understate the true scale of the practice, because they do not capture the accumulation of suspensions and expulsions by the same students over more than one year.

Instead of looking at exclusions in a single year, we studied students over ten years. This showed 19% of the 72,000 students in our group were suspended or expelled at least once between Year 3 and Year 12.

In most cases, students were suspended. Less than 1% were expelled.

As noted in , the use of suspensions/expulsions escalates in junior high school (Years 7–10). Our data also shows this pattern, with more than two-thirds (71%) of suspensions/expulsions happening during these pivotal years of school.

Why are students suspended or expelled?

Most suspensions were given for "aggressive behavior" (52%) and "continued disobedience" (31%).

More serious categories, like "" and "persistent and serious misbehavior" accounted for 10% and 12% of suspensions/expulsions respectively.

Illegal behaviors (involving things like weapons and drugs) contributed less than 5% of suspensions/expulsions.

Things build over time

About 40% of students who were suspended received just one suspension. But about 60% of students were suspended or expelled multiple times.

As shown in the chart below, almost half (45%) of all suspensions/expulsions went to just 13% of students who were suspended/expelled nine times or more. The highest number of suspensions/expulsions among these individuals was 54.

The earlier students were suspended/expelled, the more likely they were to be suspended/expelled again.

One in two students (54%) who were first suspended/expelled during primary school had repeat suspensions/expulsions. Only two in five students (40%) first suspended/expelled during high school had repeat suspensions/expulsions.

Children disappear from the system

A sharp drop in suspensions of students in Years 11 and 12 has been noted in .

However, our research suggests there is a relationship between being suspended/expelled and leaving school early.

As shown in the chart below, by Year 12, almost half (48%) of the students who had received at least one suspension in the previous ten years were no longer enrolled in a NSW public school.

Which students are being suspended the most?

Our research shows students who are already disadvantaged are more likely to be suspended from school.

Students living in the most socioeconomically disadvantaged areas, students with unemployed parents, those living in regional, remote, and very remote areas, were all significantly over-represented in the data.

These effects became more pronounced as the number of repeat suspensions rose. For example, children of unemployed parents were almost three times as likely as their peers to experience a single suspension/expulsion, but around ten times as likely to experience 16 or more suspensions or expulsions.

Boys were also much more likely to be suspended/expelled than girls. They were about twice as likely as girls to be suspended/expelled once, but around ten times as likely to be suspended/expelled 16 times or more.

In our in this sample, we found other vulnerable students, such as those with emotional and behavioral disability or maltreated children, are also overrepresented in the data.

What does this mean?

Our findings suggest there are two different issues at play.

First, schools are turning to the "last resort" of suspending or expelling students for behaviors that can and should be managed within the school using tried and tested that aim to educate a student, rather than punish or push them out.

The problem with turning to the last resort too early is students become to being suspended and schools have nothing left in the toolkit when behaviors escalate. This pattern becomes clear when children are followed over time.

Some students need more support

The second issue is some students need far more intensive academic, emotional, and behavioral support. These students are concentrated in schools serving disadvantaged communities.

System-wide improvements in behavior management will help address low-level behaviors. But this will not help some students with disability or those who have experienced trauma who may require intensive support and . This is particularly so if these students are concentrated in certain schools or areas.

Here, we can learn from public school systems in Los Angeles, New York and Chicago, where a to supporting students' academic, social-emotional and behavioral development has been introduced. School suspensions have been reduced and school safety, student engagement and achievement have increased.

The on suspensions and expulsions was revised in 2024 to place some limitations on the use of suspension and expulsion in public schools. Further research will be needed to examine the effect of that change.

However, school suspension and expulsion rates like those identified by this study are an indication that some schools need more help to support the students in their local communities.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: We tracked 72,000 NSW public school students over a decade and found 19% had been suspended or expelled (2025, October 9) retrieved 15 October 2025 from /news/2025-10-tracked-nsw-school-students-decade.html
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