“…Particularly when it came to discipline, racially minoritized communities pointedly argued that when conflicts occurred involving minoritized youth, White adults’ judgment was routinely seen as normal and justified. TISD thus fit a mold of districts amply described in the research (Clarke, 1961; Daneshzadeh and Sirrakos, 2018; Hartman, 1997; Hilliard, 1997; hooks, 1995; Jayakumar, 2007) in which ubiquitous White norms continue to “foster the permanence of White supremacist ideologies in our society” (Daneshzadeh and Sirrakos, 2018, p. 10). In these districts, Whiteness defines normalcy in school discipline, curriculum, instructional practices, and simultaneously marginalizes Blackness in all those dimensions of school life (Daneshzadeh and Sirrakos, 2018; Hartman, 1997).…”