“…Qualitative work on disproportionality has highlighted the manner in which deficit ideologies are embedded in school systems (Bal et al, 2014; Harry et al, 2005; Lambert, 2019; Leonardo & Broderick, 2011; Lewis-McCoy, 2016) and the ways in which disparate discipline and labeling practices affect students’ and families’ lived experiences (Annamma et al, 2019; Banks, 2017; Connor et al, 2019). However, quantitative and qualitative works often speak past one another in attempts to uncover complexities that are subject to agency–structure dualism ; individual actors within schools can enact agency, but outcomes remain subject to embedded structural inequities (Ahram et al, 2021; Mehan, 1992). Both discipline and special education identification represent processes that are subject to the agency–structure divide, and there are multiple points in each process at which bias may be introduced (see Smolkowski et al, 2016, for discipline, and Artiles, 2019, for special education).…”