黑料社区

Educators find creative work-arounds to new laws that restrict what they can teach

Professor Riley Drake recounts how teachers are continuing to support their students without violating executive orders or the law.
Dr. Riley Drake | April 15, 2025

This article appeared in SmartNews, Phys.org, Newsify, and others, and originated from, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

An onslaught of executive orders from President Donald Trump aim to .

Since taking office in January 2025, Trump has attempted to and order all schools that receive federal funding to recognize 鈥 male and female 鈥 potentially barring teachers from , including among their students.

Educators say the orders are having a in classrooms, with some teachers censoring themselves by minimizing . Other educators, however, are finding ways to resist what they see as federal .

In March 2025, Sarah Inama, a sixth grade history teacher in Meridian, Idaho, reading 鈥淓veryone is Welcome鈥 when school district officials claimed the message was too controversial.

鈥淭here are only two opinions on this sign. Everyone is welcome here or not everyone is welcome here,鈥 Inama said in a March 2025 interview with Today.com.

I am a scholar and . My explores how educators act alongside young people and community organizers to challenge laws, policies and ways of controlling society that they see as harmful in schools.

In my studies, I鈥檝e encountered some educators who have found clever ways to support their students and have difficult conversations without violating executive orders or the law.

Modeling transformative justice

The Trump administration 黑料社区. restrictive federal orders for schools are new, but some U.S. states have been for several years. And educators in those places have found quiet, creative ways to push back.

In 2022 of how educators in one Midwestern state were teaching social emotional learning 鈥 that is, the attitudes, skills and knowledge to .

The state 鈥 research ethics prohibit me from precisely identifying it 鈥 had recently passed legislation that the harms of racism, slavery, colonialism and gender violence in the U.S. Critics felt the law not only erased but also banned truth-telling and accountability.

One second grade teacher I observed in my study felt it was essential that her students learn to tell the truth, even in uncomfortable situations, and take accountability for their actions. She partnered with local community organizers to practice in her classroom.

Transformative justice seeks to address the root causes of people 黑料社区. harmful behavior rather than merely punishing it. When communities can get to the core of the conditions that caused the harm, this theory holds, they can better address it.

Rather than craft a lesson plan that might run up against the state 黑料社区. restrictive new laws, the teacher in my study demonstrated the values of truth-telling and accountability in her approach to everyday conflicts.

For example, one day after afternoon recess, two students refused to come back inside. The teacher waited patiently, and when eventually they returned to the classroom, she asked them what had been bothering them. The students said they were mad their classmates hadn鈥檛 allowed them to play a specific character in a game at recess.

The teacher invited the rest of the class to discuss the incident. They acknowledged that those students had been excluded. Together, the class brainstormed ways to better include everyone next time. The upset students calmed down and listened actively, then began chiming in with their own ideas about solving the problem constructively.

When schoolyard games go wrong, teachers can model different ways to resolve conflict.

Finally, the teacher asked the class to reflect on how she had handled the situation.

鈥淲hat would have happened if I had called the principal on the students who wouldn鈥檛 come inside?鈥 she asked.

鈥淭hey would have gotten in trouble!鈥 the students said.

鈥淵es, and would that have solved anything?鈥 the teacher responded.

鈥淣o, it would have made things worse,鈥 one student remarked.

In her actions and words, this teacher taught her students that punishment isn鈥檛 the only or best way to deal with conflict. And she showed them that when people tell the truth and take responsibility for their actions, they have an opportunity to .

In doing so, my research finds this teacher challenged her state 黑料社区. policy of silencing certain conversations. Other educators in this study found other ways to challenge the law, including one who invited community organizers into her classroom to support immigrant students in learning about their rights.

Solidarity with LGBTQ students

I led another study in 2023 and 2024 following legislation in Iowa and other states about gender identity and sexual orientation. In it, I documented how one middle school counselor supported after leading a school walkout protesting the state 黑料社区. anti-LGBTQ bill.

The student activists had been taunted by their peers during the walkout. Some had Pride flags torn from their hands and stomped on. Money the students had been collecting to donate to an LGBTQ organization was stolen.

鈥淚 wish we didn鈥檛 have to be quiet to be safe,鈥 one of the students told the counselor when debriefing after the incident.

The counselor arranged a meeting with the school principal to and how disconnected it made them feel from their school. When administrators did only minimal follow-up afterward, the counselor outside school to create LGBTQ-affirming spaces for students to make art together.

In my assessment, her actions demonstrated that people can come together to care for one another and showed that LGBTQ young people matter. First as an educator and then as a community member, she delivered a meaningful message to the students through showing rather than telling.

Sometimes art can deliver a message as clearly as words.

Resistance in the classroom

These are just a few examples of the many creative ways I鈥檝e documented that educators from , and other states are trying to offset the impacts of recent and .

Educators in the U.S. have long found ways to resist laws they feel are unjust.

In the 1940s, a Black teacher named fought alongside hundreds of other Black women teachers and parents for in its curriculum. The curriculum she created later became a model for districts across the U.S. to teach Black history.

is another Black educator who fought racism through teaching. After she was fired from her teaching position in South Carolina due to her connections with the NAACP, she dedicated her life to teaching, organizing and training civil rights activists .

Collaborating with others, today 黑料社区. educators are finding creative ways to , in actions if not in words.The Conversation


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