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Sunday, March 01, 2026

Manufacturing “Cancel Culture” at UT: Crisis Discourse, Governance, and the Politics of SB 17 and SB 37, by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

Manufacturing “Cancel Culture” at UT: Crisis Discourse, Governance, and the Politics of SB 17 and SB 37

by

Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.
March 1, 2026


Something remarkable has happened at the University of Texas at Austin—and throughout Texas higher education. In a state with a long history of suppressing Mexican American Studies, resisting desegregation, and policing the boundaries of public knowledge, we are now told that Women’s and Gender Studies and Ethnic Studies are the true threat to free speech.

Accordingly, the American Association of University Professors (2024) warns that increasing legislative interference in curriculum and governance poses a direct threat to academic freedom by subordinating professional judgment to political authority.

Let all of this sink in.

Fields devoted to studying power, inequality, race, gender, and colonialism are being framed as authoritarian.

And the state is intervening—ostensibly to protect liberty.

This narrative did not arise from faculty misconduct findings, accreditation failures, or scholarly scandal. It was constructed. It was amplified. And under SB 17 (2023) and SB 37 (2025), it has now been operationalized into law.

To understand what is happening in Texas higher education, we must call this what it is: a governance transformation justified through crisis discourse.

Wilson and Kamola (2023) show how selective campus incidents are magnified through coordinated media ecosystems and donor networks into "evidence" of systemic institutional failure. What might otherwise remain a local disagreement becomes proof of a national emergency. 

The cycle is predictable: identify controversy, amplify outrage, declare ideological capture, legislate reform.

In Texas, crisis preceded cure.

Before SB 17 dismantled DEI infrastructures, DEI was framed as coercive orthodoxy. Before SB 37 weakened shared governance, faculty senates were portrayed as partisan strongholds. The ground was prepared rhetorically long before it was altered legislatively.

Nancy MacLean (2017) reminds us that institutional transformation
 rarely occurs through dramatic abolition. It happens through procedural redesign. Authority shifts quietly. Governance structures are recalibrated. The institution remains standing—but its operating logic changes.

That is what SB 37 represents.

I have been at UT Austin for decades. I have seen intense disagreements over public positions faculty have taken. I have watched colleagues disagree sharply about theory, about politics, about pedagogy. That was not dysfunction. That was shared governance in action. 

What I had never seen—until now—was the systematic restructuring of governance itself through state mandate.

The American Association of University Professors has been clear for over eighty years: academic freedom is not merely an individual right. It is a structural condition sustained by shared governance (AAUP, 1940/2015; AAUP, 1966/2015). Faculty bear primary responsibility for curriculum and instruction precisely because disciplinary expertise—not political expediency—should determine academic content.

When faculty senates are weakened or replaced with advisory bodies responsive to political oversight, the architecture changes. Authority moves upward and outward.

And here is the inversion: this restructuring is justified in the name of protecting free speech.

Let us pause.

The disciplines most frequently labeled “propaganda”—Women’s and Gender Studies, Black Studies, Mexican American and Latina/o Studies, Indigenous Studies—operate through peer review, accreditation standards, and national scholarly associations. They assign canonical texts. They demand evidence-based argumentation. They expose students to intellectual traditions spanning centuries.

Critique is not cancellation. 

The irony is staggering. It's the powers that be that are doing all the canceling.

In fact, what these disciplines do—systematically—is analyze power. They interrogate racial hierarchy, gender stratification, settler colonialism, capitalism, and state formation. They ask who benefits, who is excluded, and how institutions reproduce inequality.

That analytic posture is not authoritarian.

It is foundational to the liberal arts.

The deeper issue is authority. Who decides what counts as legitimate knowledge?

The AAUP has repeatedly warned that legislative interference in curricular matters displaces professional judgment and produces chilling effects even in the absence of explicit speech bans (AAUP, 1940/2015; AAUP, 1966/2015). When lawmakers define entire areas of inquiry as suspect, scholars internalize risk. Research agendas narrow. Hiring patterns shift. Students receive the message.

The language of neutrality becomes the mechanism of control.

Organizations such as the Heritage Foundation have advanced national reform blueprints targeting DEI, curriculum, and governance structures. These agendas do not typically call for closing universities. They call for recalibrating them—redefining academic freedom as compliance with politically supervised neutrality.

When these reform agendas converge with state legislation like SB 17 and SB 37, the result is not isolated policy disagreement. It is structural realignment.

And here is where Texas history matters.

This state has long wrestled with who controls knowledge production—from textbook battles to bilingual education fights to Mexican American Studies bans in K–12. The current moment is not an anomaly. It is a continuation of a longer struggle over narrative authority.

What is new is the scale of governance redesign.

If shared governance erodes, if faculty expertise is subordinated to political oversight, if entire domains of inquiry are stigmatized through law, the university does not collapse. It shifts.

The liberal arts tradition conservatives claim to defend depends on contestation—from Plato’s dialogues to Du Bois’s sociological interventions to contemporary critical theory. A university that cannot sustain rigorous analysis of race and gender is not defending liberal education. It is curating it.

The question before Texas is not whether one agrees with every argument advanced in Women’s and Gender Studies or Ethnic Studies.

The question is whether academic legitimacy will continue to be determined by scholarly communities within shared governance structures—or by political actors invoking crisis.

Free speech does not erode because students argue.

It erodes when governance systems are redesigned to align inquiry with state-defined boundaries.

SB 17 and SB 37 are not cultural skirmishes. They are governance interventions. And governance is the backbone of academic freedom.

If we allow that backbone to weaken while congratulating ourselves for defending free speech, we should be honest about what is happening.

We are not rescuing the liberal arts. We are redefining them in the image of political oversight.

History teaches us that when authority over knowledge production shifts from scholarly communities to political power, the effects rarely remain confined to a single department. Such shifts tend to expand, normalizing intervention and narrowing the boundaries of acceptable inquiry across the institution. Once the precedent is set—that legislatures may define which fields are suspect, which governance structures are dispensable, and which scholarly frameworks are legitimate—the logic does not easily contain itself.

The question, then, is not whether one program is next. It is whether the university itself—its autonomy, its governing norms, its capacity for independent judgment—can withstand sustained political encroachment.

At moments like this, institutional repair requires more than rhetorical defense. It requires civic action. If governance structures have been weakened through legislation, they must be restored through legislation. If academic freedom has been narrowed by those in power, then the democratic remedy is clear: voters must hold those officials accountable and elect leaders committed to institutional autonomy and the public mission of higher education.

If we are to truly live in a free society, the defense of the university must be understood as inseparable from the defense of democracy itself.

References

American Association of University Professors. (1940/2015). 1940 statement of principles on academic freedom and tenure. https://www.aaup.org/reports-publications/aaup-policies-reports/topical-reports/statement-government-colleges-and

American Association of University Professors. (1966/2015). Statement on government of colleges and universities. https://www.aaup.org/reports-publications/aaup-policies-reports/topical-reports/statement-government-colleges-and

MacLean, N. (2017). Democracy in chains: The deep history of the radical right’s stealth plan for America. Penguin Press.

Wilson, J. K., & Kamola, I. (2023). Free speech and Koch money: Manufacturing a campus culture war. Pluto Press.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

UT's restructuring makes Texas less inclusive and more divided, by Alicia Perez-Hodge

 Friends:

I urge you to read this opinion on the dissolution of Mexican American and Latino Studies (MALS) at UT written by a highly respected member of the Latino community in Austin, Alicia Perez-Hodge. Our community is clearly concerned about these developments.

-Angela Valenzuela


By ,Guest columnist
A student walks through the University of Texas campus in 2023. A recent announcement to effectively end Mexican American Studies and related fields of study at UT came without meaningful discussion with those most affected, Alicia Perez-Hodge writes.Aaron Martinez/Austin American-Statesman

In South Texas public schools, I learned about Robert E. Lee and George Washington and the histories of the United States and Texas. Yet not a single lesson addressed Mexican American history — our Indigenous and African roots or the men and women who shaped this country. It was as if only Anglos made history.

It was only when I took an ethnic studies course in college that I discovered Mexican Americans have a history — one deeply intertwined with that of other communities. Later, when a career move took me to New England, that education proved invaluable. That knowledge shaped my professional life and prepared me to work with diverse communities.

I share this experience because the University of Texas now risks denying today’s students the same opportunity. UT President Jim Davis recently announced a proposal that will effectively end Mexican American Studies and related fields of study at the university. The proposal consolidates the Department of Mexican American and Latina/o Studies (MALS), the Department of African and African Diaspora Studies, the Department of American Studies, and the Department of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies into a single department called the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis.

In practical terms, the restructuring will result in funding cuts for staffing and research as well as the elimination of programs, threatening decades of academic achievement that made UT a leading center for the study of Mexican Americans and Latino communities. Davis has framed the restructuring as necessary to maintain public trust and fulfill the university’s mission.

For Latino and African American communities, the consolidation has the opposite effect. It neither builds trust nor fulfills the university’s responsibility to serve a state where communities of color are the majority. Among those most affected are MALS and its affiliates, including the Latino Research Institute (LRI) and the Center for Mexican American Studies (CMAS).

RELATED: The University of Texas is clipping the wings of students of color


CMAS, established more than 50 years ago in response to student and community advocacy, plays a crucial role in advancing research and public understanding of Mexican American and Latino histories, cultures and contributions. MALS, founded 15 years ago, has a national reputation as a high-caliber academic department that brings distinction to the university. These programs are not redundant or fragmented. They are the result of decades of scholarship, community engagement and institutional development.

Equally troubling is the lack of meaningful consultation with those most affected by this proposal. Davis has disregarded public input from major stakeholder communities. Two months ago, the Latino Coalition for Excellence in Higher Education — a consortium that includes the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), Hispanic Advocates and Business Leaders of Austin (HABLA), the Latino Texas Policy Center and the Texas Association of Mexican American Chambers of Commerce — formally requested dialogue. The Texas Exes Hispanic Alumni Network also sent a letter in November.

Both groups expressed a willingness to collaborate with university leadership to ensure the continued vitality of Latino Studies. To date, these communications have been ignored, signaling a troubling lack of engagement with communities that have long supported and invested in UT.

This consolidation appears politically motivated, aligning with state and national efforts to restrict diversity, equity and inclusion. Gov. Greg Abbott, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and President Donald Trump have all advocated eliminating what they label “divisive” academic programs. These efforts disproportionately target the study of Mexican Americans, Latinos and other minority communities.


Consolidating or diluting departments centered on communities of color — while leaving other academic fields intact — sends a message about whose histories are valued. More than 11 million Texans identify as Latino, representing about 40% of the state’s population and 53% of students in Texas public schools. To marginalize the academic study of these communities amounts to institutional racism. "Education without representation" is wrong and must be challenged. 


Davis’ announcement raises serious questions about process, transparency and accountability. Who conducted the review cited in his memo? What evidence supports claims of “fragmentation” and “inconsistency”? Why have affected faculty, students, alumni and community organizations been excluded from meaningful participation?

The proposed consolidation threatens not only specific departments, but the university’s commitment to academic excellence and public service. Community organizations, alumni and advocates urge university leadership to halt the consolidation, engage with stakeholders and uphold the integrity of programs that reflect and serve the people of Texas. Only through open dialogue and accountability can the university maintain public trust and fulfill its mission to all Texans.
Alicia Perez-Hodge is a long time community advocate, co-founder of HABLA and district VII director of LULAC in Austin.

Academic Freedom Under Revision at Texas A&M: Family Values, Forbidden Fields, and the Closure of Women’s and Gender Studies, by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

Academic Freedom Under Revision at Texas A&M: Family Values, Forbidden Fields, and the Closure of Women’s and Gender Studies

by

Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.
February 25, 2026

The Republican Party frequently invokes “family values” and moral order as justification for policies targeting LGBTQ+ communities, trans youth, and gender-related scholarship. Yet public rhetoric often collides with private reality—as seen in widely reported spikes in activity on Grindr—an LGBTQ social networking platformduring Republican National Conventions. According to Keller (2024), the app crashed during the RNC in Milwaukee (also see McFall, 2025).

To be clear, I am not suggesting that Texas Republicans themselves are part of this apparently large group of Grindr users. Sexual orientation exists across all political affiliations. The issue is not who uses a dating app. The issue is that the party apparatus leans into anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and policy agendas while evidence suggests that sexuality is far more politically diverse and privately complex than its public messaging implies. That contradiction is what deserves scrutiny.

That tension is instructive as Texas A&M eliminates its Women’s and Gender Studies program, ending a field of study that had been part of the university since 1979 (Blinder, 2026; Panigrahi, 2026). Students currently enrolled may finish their degrees, but no new students can enter the program. At the same time, new policies restrict how race, gender, and sexuality can be discussed in classrooms unless explicitly approved by university leadership.

This is not an isolated administrative decision. It reflects a broader pattern across several states where women’s and gender studies, LGBTQ+ studies, and diversity initiatives are being reduced or dismantled under the language of neutrality and oversight. What is framed as restoring balance is, in practice, narrowing inquiry.

The deeper issue is governance. When elected officials condemn LGBTQ+ communities publicly while private behavior reveals a far more complex reality, and when universities respond by limiting academic exploration of gender and sexuality, the message is clear: this is less about morality than about control—including, perhaps, members within their own party where lived realities do not always align neatly with official policy platforms.

Academic freedom does not disappear all at once. It contracts. Programs close. Courses are reviewed. Speech is pre-approved. And gradually, the boundaries of legitimate knowledge are redrawn by political actors rather than scholars.

When one of the nation’s largest public universities eliminates a decades-long academic program focused on gender and power, it signals more than curricular change. It signals a struggle over who decides what can be studied—and ultimately, what kind of democracy we are willing to sustain.

References

Blinder, A. (2026, January 30). Texas A&M ends women’s studies and overhauls classes over race and gender. The New York Timeshttps://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/30/us/texas-am-gender-ethnic-womens-studies-academic-freedom.html

Keller, E. (2024, July 19). Grindr dating app crashes in Milwaukee during RNC: Everything we know, Newsweekhttps://www.newsweek.com/grindr-app-crashes-milwaukee-rnc-1927750

McFall, M. R. (2025, Aug. 14) Are gay dating apps threatening to expose republicans? What we know, Newseek. https://www.newsweek.com/gay-lgbtq-dating-app-republicans-supreme-court-marriage-2113522

Panigrahi, E. (2026, February 24). Texas A&M’s women’s and gender studies closure signals a wider crackdown on academic freedom. Ms. Magazine. https://msmagazine.com/2026/02/24/texas-am-women-gender-studies-academic-freedom-dei-diversity-equity-inclusion/


Texas A&M’s Women’s and Gender Studies Closure Signals a Wider Crackdown on Academic Freedom

PUBLISHED 2/24/2026 by Emersen Panigrahi


Texas A&M Aggies athletes cheer on a teammate in the Women’s 500 Yard Freestyle Finals during the Division I Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships on March 21, 2024, in Athens, Ga. (Alex Slitz / NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

In many parts of the U.S., students and professors are left navigating a rapidly narrowing space for inquiry and expression

Texas A&M University announced late last month it will eliminate its women’s and gender studies program, effective immediately. At the same time, the university enacted new policies that heavily restrict classroom discussions related to diversity, race and gender, unless a course has been previously approved by the campus president. While students currently enrolled in the women’s and gender studies program will be able to complete their degrees, new students can no longer enroll.

With over 81,000 students, 17 colleges and schools on its main campus, three campuses across the state (plus several satellite locations, including one in Washington, D.C.) and more than 140 undergraduate degrees, Texas A&M is one of the nation’s largest public university systems. It began instruction in 1876 and began offering women’s and gender studies courses in 1979. The elimination of the program marks the abrupt end of a decades-long academic offering—and, coupled with new and dangerous policies regarding race, gender and sexuality, sets a disturbing precedent and furthers a chilling, anti-education agenda.
Timeline: How A&M Dismantled Gender and LGBTQ+ Programs, Step by Step

March 2023 — At West Texas A&M (Texas A&M’s northernmost campus), university president Walter Wendler blocked an on-campus drag show. The student group hosting the show, Spectrum WT, filed a lawsuit in response. The case remained active until recently, when federal judge Matthew Kacsmaryk upheld the university’s decision, ruling the school did not violate the First Amendment.

August 2024 — Texas A&M stopped offering gender-affirming care to their students, forcing those receiving care to seek providers elsewhere.

November 2024 — The university eliminated its LGBTQ+ studies minor, previously housed within the women’s and gender studies program.

February 2025 — Texas A&M’s Board of Regents (all appointed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott) attempted to ban drag shows across system campuses. This particular ban was temporarily blocked.

September 2025 — A&M’s university president Mark A. Welsh III fired lecturer Dr. Melissa McCoul following a classroom dispute over a lesson on gender identity. McCoul is now suing the university, alleging violations of her free speech and due process rights.

November 2025 — As a result of a unanimous Board of Regents decision, the university reviewed more than 5,400 course syllabi, cut six courses entirely, granted 48 special exceptions, and required hundreds more to be modified.

January 2026 — Texas A&M announced it would eliminate its women’s and gender studies program.

From Florida to Ohio to Texas, the Same Playbook Is Unfolding

Texas A&M is not alone. Across the United States, institutions including New College of Florida, Wichita State University and the University of Toledo have reduced or eliminated women’s and gender studies programs. Hundreds of universities have also scaled back or rebranded diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in response to political pressure and new state laws.

The closure of Texas A&M’s program reflects a broader national trend: mounting restrictions on how gender, race and sexuality can be studied and discussed in public higher education. For students and faculty, these changes reshape not only what can be taught, but what kinds of scholarship and inquiry are permitted on campus. The elimination of a long-standing academic program at one of the country’s largest public universities signals how quickly these shifts can take hold, and how widely they may spread.

Being concerned is no longer enough. It’s time for us to stand up and actively protect these programs.

Students, educators and advocates are increasingly being asked to document and challenge the dismantling of academic programs and protections across the country.

Ms. Classroom wants to hear from educators and students being impacted by legislation attacking public education, higher education, gender, race and sexuality studies, activism and social justice in education, and diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Cue: a new series from Ms., ‘Banned! Voices from the Classroom.’ Submit pitches and/or op-eds and reflections (between 500-800 words) to Ms. contributing editor Aviva Dove-Viebahn at adove-viebahn@msmagazine.com. Posts will be accepted on a rolling basis.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

SEAT and the Student Bill of Rights: Texas Youth Shaping the Democratic Present, by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

SEAT and the Student Bill of Rights: Texas Youth Shaping the Democratic Present

by 

Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

February 24, 2026

It’s time for another shout-out to the extraordinary young people of SEAT (Students Engaged in Advancing Texas) and their powerful Student Bill of Rights. I’ve said this before, and I’ll say it again: people need to know about this work. 

In my 25 years as a policy analyst and advocate at the Texas Legislature, I have never witnessed youth activism at the scale and intensity that I see today. 

I would even venture to say that we are living through a historic high point of youth engagement in our state. 

This level of organizing did not happen overnight. It reflects decades of groundwork, mentorship, courage, and persistence—and SEAT is just one of many remarkable youth formations. It does not even include the powerful activism of young leaders connected to LULAC, the NAACP, the Texas Freedom Network, and other organizations across Texas.

Congratulations to SEAT for developing what is arguably one of the most important democratic documents to emerge from Texas youth in recent years.

Crafted by students, for students, the Student Bill of Rights reminds us of something too often forgotten in public education debates: young people are not passive recipients of policy. They are primary stakeholders in their own futures.

In a political climate marked by book bans, attacks on truthful curriculum, punitive discipline practices, and the narrowing of student voice, this declaration reframes education as a site of agency, dignity, and collective care. It calls for high-quality public education, holistic well-being, freedom of expression, and truthful, critical curriculum—not as partisan demands, but as democratic necessities.

By linking student agency to public accountability and insisting that all students be served regardless of identity, history, or circumstance, SEAT articulates a vision of education rooted in belonging rather than exclusion. This Bill of Rights does more than outline aspirations; it models civic leadership in real time, reminding Texas that students are not merely the leaders of tomorrow—they are shaping the democratic present.

Follow them on Twitter and Instagram @studentsengaged 

Sending y’all much love. 🩷🩷🩷

Student Bill of Rights

SEAT (Students Engaged in Advancing Texas) | Adopted Jan. 6, 2025



Students Deserve:


  1. Agency to make decisions in education

  2. High quality public education for all

  3. Safe and welcoming school environments conducive to growth

  4. Freedom of expression in a pluralistic, multicultural democracy

  5. Holistic student care to support health and well-being

  6. Truthful, critical, and substantive curriculum

  7. To be leaders of today, not only of tomorrow

  8. Streamlined and personalized pathways for lifelong learning




SEAT believes all students and children shall be served under this bill, no matter their identity, lived experiences, disciplinary histories, or present interactions with public and educational institutions. All students deserve equal and positive treatment under the rule of law and this declaration of rights.


This Bill of Rights was crafted by the SEAT Roundtable Collective in Aug. 2024 - Jan. 2025 as a declaration for students, by students. We deserve a seat at the table.

View online: studentsengaged.org/bill-of-rights


  1. Agency to make decisions in education.

Having a seat at the table means students reclaiming ownership of our education, giving us power and freedom in the everyday social situations that impact our school experiences, and thus, our futures. We shall not be tokenized as an outsider or subjugated as political pawns in decisions most impacting us. Our voices have power.

Students are the primary stakeholders in education, but we are traditionally excluded from policy-making decisions in school boards and the state legislature. Officials cannot best represent students when they cultivate a "power over" relationship instead of "power with" students.

School boards directly influence education policy about students, often without us. These governing bodies should sufficiently include students in conversations, roundtables, workshops, committees, and most importantly, on the same dais where they legislate.

  1. High quality public education for all.

Education is a cornerstone of community and democracy. Students spend a significant portion of our childhood and adolescence in a classroom, and we want it to mean something for us. We want education to be a highlight of our youth and fulfill our sense of confidence.

Public schools must serve everyone to the fullest extent, throughout rural and urban communities, regardless of socioeconomic disparities. Students should face no entry barriers to accessing a quality education meant to help us learn and grow alongside peers. We can address chronic absenteeism by taking measures to uphold quality education.

Strong teachers help shape strong students. Our student experiences are defined by educators’ working experiences. We must invest in a workforce of educators who are duly committed to students, highly competent, and sufficiently compensated for teaching demands.

Trust is critical to students’ relationships with adults at school. Students should feel that our educators and administrators care about our needs as individuals, not merely as numbers or written records. Retention of educators and cultivating a school community of joy serves everyone.

The quality of facilities significantly influences students’ desire to attend and thrive at school. Students deserve functioning facilities with prime infrastructure, free from dangers to student health, including excessive temperatures, harmful substances, or biohazards.

Students deserve the right to school libraries that provide access to resources and knowledge, in the form of books, the Internet, guidance by librarians, and more. Libraries and classrooms shall be boundless for fostering exploration, imagination, and possibility.

Schools should be a support system meant to break cycles of marginalization. Not all families can or want to be involved in fostering a student’s educational trajectory. Education systems must be accountable to helping first-generation or dropout-prone students thrive, despite any potential barriers like wealth or citizenship status.

  1. Safe and welcoming school environments conducive to growth.

When students enter school each day, we should not fear gun violence, bullying, harassment, or a prison sentence. School should support students coming as we are, with limited English proficiency or in proximity to the impact of substance abuse. Schools can make a difference in a student’s life if it becomes a central goal for education.

Gun violence is a public health epidemic and a reality for Generation Z and Alpha. These cycles of violence do not need to be a broken record. We are ready to turn the page toward safe storage measures and preventing guns from ending up in the hands of anyone in crisis or who has made threats of violence toward themself or others.

Let’s educate, not incarcerate. Student discipline must improve situations, not worsen them. School officials have the subconscious power to permanently affect a student’s life trajectory. Instead of punitive alternative programs, racially biased to involve students of color, restorative practices can help shatter the school-to-prison pipeline.

The carceral state disproportionately harms marginalized youth and establishes no accountability. Incarceration costs excessive public dollars and too often repeats with recidivism. We must invest in students’ future as leaders, not victims of a broken juvenile system.

Education systems should enforce contemporary, comprehensive anti-discrimination policies that protect all students. We can cultivate compassion in school culture for students to best learn and grow skills needed in adulthood.

Ensuring schools take proactive measures to prevent drug abuse and support affected students is essential for fostering overall student well-being. Actions by school and public officials, instead of complicity or roundabout attempts at solutions, can contribute to safer educational environments.

Bilingual education should serve students from a variety of language backgrounds. Texas is a multilingual state. Our education system should empower, not shame, native tongues and language learning.

Children are one of the most disabled groups of people. Disabled and neurodivergent students should not be unfairly punished or judged for behavioral actions considered outside of normative societal standards.

When environments are not safe, students should be aware of processes for reporting issues or talking to trusted adults who will advocate for us. School professionals should hold responsibility toward protecting students with utmost integrity regardless of school pressures.

  1. Freedom of expression in a pluralistic,
    multicultural democracy.

To freely express ourselves is core to shaping our lives and bettering the future. Texas is an enormous state with rich culture. Our diversity makes us great. Schools must empower students to be the best of ourselves.

Discriminatory dress codes, targeting students across gender norms and ethnic-cultural styles, distract from education and harm self-esteem. The right to our own bodies is critical, and the State belongs away.

Generation Z is the most openly LGBTQ+ generation in history. Names and pronouns are centermost in our lives. Regardless of what we call ourselves, it matters more that others refer to us in affirming ways. To support student well-being and social confidence, we must embolden inclusive community values of respect that do not give power to deadnaming and misgendering.

As lawmakers seek to blur the separation of Church and State, public schools must support students secularly and without enforcing religious customs. We should, however, learn of diverse world faiths and defend students’ individual right to religious liberty. Nationalism, especially bolstering religious doctrine, undermines faith and education.

Students clubs, organizations, and athletics should be spaces for us to explore interests, engage in social causes, and create community. Students should have equal access to lead or participate in clubs. School publications should respect student voices without censorship.

When power structures aren’t right, students deserve the unfettered ability to challenge oppression, especially when imposed by authority. Our right to assemble and petition must be protected, not trampled.

  1. Holistic student care to support health and well-being.

Entering school each day, students bring a reflection of our personal lives into the classroom. Regardless of socioeconomic status, wraparound services fulfill student needs and steer us on a track to success, fostering better social and learning environments for all.

From food to healthcare, including breakfast and menstrual products, schools must fulfill our basic needs before expecting us to perform socially and academically. These services should be provided to students at no individual cost and without stipulations.

Schools should have nurses, sufficiently equipped with inhalers, epipens, insulin, overdose medication, and other necessary, potentially life-saving measures for students. All students should be generally knowledgeable of resource locations and how we can access them in an emergency.

Amid a youth mental health crisis, school counseling and seamless pathways to additional services are vital for vulnerable students to navigate trauma, substance abuse, adverse experiences, and everyday dilemmas.

Neighborhood transportation between home and school is necessary to ensure student safety and breaking barriers for students and families on financial, physical, or workplace bases.

After-school tutoring and programs, both social and extracurricular, are vital to narrowing the gap between student performance, well-being, learning loss, and at-home factors contributing to a student’s situation at school. Schools should be a community of care for students.

  1. Truthful, critical, and substantive curriculum.

Students must hold agency to indiscriminately access and utilize our education in ways that affirm our identities and help us discover the unfamiliar. Teaching to an unjust status quo is a disservice to the youngest generation of Texans.

Students deserve the right to educate ourselves about sensitive topics, especially when politically contentious. To foster a love for reading and learning, no one should decide for students what we can or cannot read. We must hold the individual agency to decide which books we read.

We should trust the expertise of librarians and educators to curate age-relevant and educationally-suitable collections. Interest groups and politicians with ulterior motives should not hold greater authority over the autonomy of all families in a school system.

Curricula should represent Texas’ vast diversity in culture and ideas. We must teach the truth, with fact-based evidence and critical perspectives. Commonplace myths and false narratives make dangerous impressions on students and hold no educational suitability. If we are to act as critical thinkers, we must not lie to students. Truth must be the norm.

Education should be liberating and life-giving. To facilitate freedom, we must teach standards, not standardization. Rote memorization for heavy testing and data collection treats students homogeneously. Instead, we must give life to each students’ uniqueness, curiosity, and passion.

  1. To be leaders of today, not only of tomorrow.

To best navigate the complexities of today’s Texas, students must be equipped with the education necessary for becoming a generation of success, impact, and excellence. We must be prepared for our futures so we determine and shape our trajectories. Critical thinking is crucial to becoming an active member of society.

Our 13 years in K-12 schools must adequately prepare us with resources and curriculum for financial and medical literacy. Learning to file taxes, buy a car or home, and understand legal contracts instills confidence in our socioeconomic lives. Comprehensive fact-based sex ed curriculum, with an emphasis on consent, is necessary to reduce domestic violence and STDs. This is how we build a society with competency and respect for one another.

With the integral presence of the Internet in contemporary life, we must learn responsible digital citizenship. Social media is a valuable tool in which we must safeguard our rights for free use. Big Tech should be held accountable for dangers posed to youth. Empowering students with multimedia literacy and judgment of reality facilitates a more informed, cooperative, and engaged society.

We must actualize power for civic leadership, navigating interpersonal conflict, and building professional relationships. We must be aware of our elected officials at all levels of government and understand that we play a critical role as a Fourth Branch of government. Learning how to engage in civic institutions through voting and public engagement will help us shape, not merely inherit, the world we wish to live in.

  1. Streamlined and personalized pathways
    for lifelong learning.

Education is a life-long endeavor. Opportunities for Higher Education must be affordable, accessible, and student-oriented.

There is no singular or correct path for students. Education should challenge us to be the best of ourselves while simultaneously handing us the keys to our own academic, social, and professional journeys.

Districts should provide classroom instruction and hands-on experiences for learning Career and Technical Education.

K-12 education should prepare us for post-school opportunities that empower and encourage excellence. We should have opportunities to explore Higher Education through online research and firsthand experiences. Academic advising should be available to all students.

University finances should hold students in their best interest. We should be given an educational experience worth our investment and be spared from malicious billing practices. Financial aid should ensure any student with the interest of pursuing higher education is guaranteed such opportunity.