Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
With Sweeping Executive Orders, Trump Tests Local Control of Schools
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 9 hours ago on
January 30, 2025

An all gender student restroom at Belvedere Middle School in East Los Angeles, Sept. 23, 2024. With sweeping executive orders, President Donald Trump tests local control of schools. (Philip Cheung/The New York Times)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

With a series of executive orders, President Donald Trump has demonstrated that he has the appetite for an audacious fight to remake public education in the image of his “anti-woke,” populist political movement.

But in a country unique among nations for its hyperlocal control of schools, the effort is likely to run into legal, logistical and funding trouble as it tests the limits of federal power over K-12 education.

On Wednesday evening, Trump signed two executive orders. One was a 2,400-word behemoth focused mainly on race, gender and American history. It seeks to prevent schools from recognizing transgender identities or teaching about concepts such as structural racism, “white privilege” and “unconscious bias,” by threatening their federal funding.

Order Promotes ‘Patriotic’ Education

The order also promotes “patriotic” education that depicts the American founding as “unifying, inspiring and ennobling” while explaining how the United States “has admirably grown closer to its noble principles throughout its history.”

The second order directs a swath of federal agencies to look for ways to expand access to private school vouchers.

Both orders echo energetic conservative lawmaking in the states. Over the past five years, the number of children using taxpayer dollars for private education or home-schooling costs has doubled, to 1 million. More than 20 states have restricted how race, gender and American history can be discussed in schools. States and school boards have banned thousands of books.

It is not clear what real-world effect the new federal orders might have in places where shifts are not already underway. States and localities provide 90% of the funding for public education — and have the sole power to set curriculums, tests, teaching methods and school-choice policies.

The orders are likely to strain against the limits of the federal government’s role in K-12 education, a role that Trump has said should be reduced.

That paradox is a “confounding” one, said Derrell Bradford, president of 50CAN, a nonpartisan group that supports private school choice. He applauded the executive order on vouchers and said that taken together, the two orders mark a major moment in the centuries-old debate over what values the nation’s schools should impart.

“You can like it or not, but we’re not going to have values-neutral schools,” he said.

Legal Questions About Admin’s Ability to Restrict Funding

Still, there are many legal questions about the administration’s ability to restrict federal funding in order to pressure schools.

The major funding stream that supports public schools, known as Title I, goes out to states in a formula set by Congress, and the president has little power to restrict its flow.

“It seems like a significant part of the strategy is to set priorities through executive order and make the Congress or the Supreme Court respond — as they are supposed to in a system of checks and balances,” Bradford said.

The executive branch does control smaller tranches of discretionary funding, but they may not be enough to persuade school districts to change their practices.

In Los Angeles, Alberto Carvalho, superintendent of the nation’s second-largest school district, said last fall that regardless of who won the presidential election, his system would not change the way it handles gender identity.

Transgender students are allowed to play on sports teams and use bathrooms that align with their gender identities, policies the Trump order is trying to end.

On Wednesday, after it became clear that Trump would attempt to cut funding, a spokesperson for the Los Angeles public school district released a more guarded statement, saying, “Our academic standards are aligned with all state and federal mandates and we remain committed to creating and maintaining a safe and inclusive learning environment for all students.”

One big limit to Trump’s agenda is that despite official federal, state and district policies, individual teachers have significant say over what gets taught and how.

Even in conservative regions of Republican-run states, efforts to control the curriculum have sometimes sputtered.

In Oklahoma, for example, where the state superintendent, Ryan Walters, is a Trump ally, some conservative educators have pushed back against efforts to insert the Bible into the curriculum.

Survey’s Show Majority of Teachers Did Not Change Classroom Materials

Nationally, surveys of teachers show that the majority did not change their classroom materials or methods in response to conservative laws. Some educators have reported that they are able to subtly resist attempts to control how subjects like racism are talked about, for example, by teaching students about the debate for and against restrictive curriculum policies.

Florida has been, in many ways, an outlying case — and one that has served as a model for the Trump administration.

There, Gov. Ron DeSantis created powerful incentives for teachers to embrace priorities such as emphasizing the Christian beliefs of the founding fathers and restricting discussions of gender and racism.

Teachers could earn a $3,000 bonus for taking a training course on new civics learning standards. If their students performed poorly on a standardized test of the subject, their own evaluation ratings suffered.

DeSantis’ Restrictions on Race and Gender Were Broad

On race and gender, the DeSantis restrictions were broad and vaguely written. Schools accused of breaking the laws could be sued for financial damages, and teachers were threatened with losing their professional licenses.

This led many schools and educators to interpret the laws broadly. Sometimes they interpreted them more broadly than intended, the DeSantis administration claimed. A ban on books with sexual content led one district to announce that “Romeo and Juliet” would be pulled from the curriculum.

A ban on recognizing transgender identities led to schools sending home nickname permission slips to parents, which were required even if a student named William wanted to be called Will.

Public school educators are often fearful of running into trouble with higher-level authorities. It is possible, and even likely, that Trump’s executive orders will lead to some measure of self-censorship.

Adam Laats, an education historian at Binghamton University, said one potential historical antecedent for Trump’s executive order was the Red Scare in the mid-20th century, during which many teachers accused of Communist sympathies lost their jobs or were taken to court.

“To my mind, this executive order is a blast of steam,” he said, “dangerous especially because it can encourage local aggressive activism.”

But, he noted, political attempts to ban ideas from the classroom have rarely been successful.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Dana Goldstein/Philip Cheung
c. 2025 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Fresno Man With Multiple DUIs Gets 30 Years for Crash That Killed Two

DON'T MISS

JOANN Fabrics and Crafts to Close Visalia Distribution Facility, Shedding 209 Jobs

DON'T MISS

Meux Home, Once Questioned by City Council, Now Honored

DON'T MISS

Kings County Sheriff Says Arrested Homicide/Kidnapping Suspect Had Fled to Mexico

DON'T MISS

Man Rescued After Falling 25 Feet Into Drainage Pipe in Fresno

DON'T MISS

Has Fresno Unified Finally Planted the Flag for an Academic Revolution?

DON'T MISS

Italy Blocks Access to Chinese AI Application DeepSeek to Protect Users’ Data

DON'T MISS

What’s In a School Name? Central Trustees Opt Not to Seek Communitywide Input This Time

DON'T MISS

Super Bowl 2025: Time, Channel, Halftime Show, How to Watch Chiefs vs. Eagles Livestream

DON'T MISS

Collision Between Helicopter and Jetliner Kills 67 in Nation’s Worst Air Disaster in a Generation

UP NEXT

JOANN Fabrics and Crafts to Close Visalia Distribution Facility, Shedding 209 Jobs

UP NEXT

Meux Home, Once Questioned by City Council, Now Honored

UP NEXT

Kings County Sheriff Says Arrested Homicide/Kidnapping Suspect Had Fled to Mexico

UP NEXT

Man Rescued After Falling 25 Feet Into Drainage Pipe in Fresno

UP NEXT

Has Fresno Unified Finally Planted the Flag for an Academic Revolution?

UP NEXT

Italy Blocks Access to Chinese AI Application DeepSeek to Protect Users’ Data

UP NEXT

What’s In a School Name? Central Trustees Opt Not to Seek Communitywide Input This Time

UP NEXT

Super Bowl 2025: Time, Channel, Halftime Show, How to Watch Chiefs vs. Eagles Livestream

UP NEXT

Collision Between Helicopter and Jetliner Kills 67 in Nation’s Worst Air Disaster in a Generation

UP NEXT

World Champion Russian Skaters on American Airlines Jet Built a New Life as Coaches in the US

Kings County Sheriff Says Arrested Homicide/Kidnapping Suspect Had Fled to Mexico

3 hours ago

Man Rescued After Falling 25 Feet Into Drainage Pipe in Fresno

3 hours ago

Has Fresno Unified Finally Planted the Flag for an Academic Revolution?

4 hours ago

Italy Blocks Access to Chinese AI Application DeepSeek to Protect Users’ Data

5 hours ago

What’s In a School Name? Central Trustees Opt Not to Seek Communitywide Input This Time

5 hours ago

Super Bowl 2025: Time, Channel, Halftime Show, How to Watch Chiefs vs. Eagles Livestream

5 hours ago

Collision Between Helicopter and Jetliner Kills 67 in Nation’s Worst Air Disaster in a Generation

5 hours ago

World Champion Russian Skaters on American Airlines Jet Built a New Life as Coaches in the US

5 hours ago

Fresno County Confirms Two Flu Deaths While Nationwide Stats Rise

5 hours ago

Kings County Children Found After Amber Alert Issued, Suspect in Custody

7 hours ago

Fresno Man With Multiple DUIs Gets 30 Years for Crash That Killed Two

A Fresno man with prior DUI convictions was sentenced Thursday to 30 years to life in prison for a 2022 crash that killed two people, the Fr...

2 hours ago

A repeat DUI offender, Jaime Figueroa, 68, of Fresno, was sentenced to 30 years to life for a 2022 Fresno crash that killed two people on Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (Fresno County SO)
2 hours ago

Fresno Man With Multiple DUIs Gets 30 Years for Crash That Killed Two

2 hours ago

JOANN Fabrics and Crafts to Close Visalia Distribution Facility, Shedding 209 Jobs

3 hours ago

Meux Home, Once Questioned by City Council, Now Honored

A 19-year-old Hanford resident is in stable condition after being shot in the Santa Rosa Rancheria early Thursday, and a juvenile male suspect, wanted for a prior homicide, was arrested with a loaded handgun. (Kings County SO)
3 hours ago

Kings County Sheriff Says Arrested Homicide/Kidnapping Suspect Had Fled to Mexico

Fresno fire saves a man who fell down a 25 foot drainage pipe on Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (Fresno FD)
3 hours ago

Man Rescued After Falling 25 Feet Into Drainage Pipe in Fresno

4 hours ago

Has Fresno Unified Finally Planted the Flag for an Academic Revolution?

5 hours ago

Italy Blocks Access to Chinese AI Application DeepSeek to Protect Users’ Data

5 hours ago

What’s In a School Name? Central Trustees Opt Not to Seek Communitywide Input This Time

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend