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Showing posts with label school boards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school boards. Show all posts

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.


Monday, May 05, 2025

'Deport yourself': Humble ISD candidate reports alleged home vandalism—"Latinos have to unite, because our students are our priority right now"

Friends:

This vandalism and harassment is so despicable on so many levels. The concept of "racialized voter suppression" and associated candidate intimidation should no longer be abstractions if they were to begin with. And please, telling a U.S. citizen to “deport yourself” based on her ethnicity and culture is racist to the core. 

It's also misogynistic, designed to push Latinas and women, generally, out of their pursuit of public office. This aligns with the regular defaming and misrepresenting of AOC, Jasmine Crockett, Ilhan Omar, Ayanna Pressley, Cori Bush, and others is a way to discredit their policy positions and to manufacture disfavor with those they represent.

Castillo’s past advocacy for bilingual, community-engaged students earning graduation sashes should be uplifted rather than put down, considering her wonderful sense of civic duty and helping marginalized students. At the base of this civic harm to where she feels unsafe in her own home is trying to impact broader publics from ever considering running for office. I hope she wins her school board race in Humble ISD.

Great quote by Castillo. 

"This is the time where we Latinos have to unite, because our students are our priority right now. Our students deserve to have an equal education like anyone else."

I hope they have a LULAC Chapter in Humble or that they form one. I hear that Houston LULAC is on top of this. 

-Angela Valenzuela

"They're mocking my incident as if I'm doing this to get more votes instead of actually seeing it as a threat to a candidate."

By ,Trending News Reporter

"Deport yourself" was written on a Humble ISD school board candidate's home. (Judy Castillo) 

By ,Trending News Reporter

The Harris County Sheriff's Office is investigating an alleged incident of vandalism at the home of a candidate for the Humble ISD school board, where the words "deport yourself" were found on her door on Friday. 

Judith Castillo, who is running for a trustee position in Humble, said she's been targeted and harassed since her campaign began. In addition to the messages telling her to "deport herself," she said she's received harassing messages with name-calling and sexual content. She also said she's been followed to work and her social media accounts have been hacked.  

Although Castillo’s campaign centers on anti-bullying, she says she has been the target of similar hostility throughout the election. Much of the backlash, she says, has focused on her race—driven by the false belief that her platform only supports Hispanic students.  

"It's been an ongoing issue where people are saying I'm just running to represent Hispanic students. I'm not running just to represent Hispanic students, I'm running to represent all students," Castillo told Chron.  "I am running to have a voice for my community." 


Humble, Texas is 56.2 percent Hispanic or Latino, according to data from the U.S. Census. 


Some parents have criticized Castillo over an incident a few years ago, when Castillo, then a teacher, stood up for her students after the superintendent removed their graduation sashes. The sashes had previously been approved by the administration to commend the students for their volunteer work every week through mentorship programs aimed at improving bilingual literacy at the local elementary school. 

"A lot of parents thought I was trying to promote only my race and help only my people," Castillo said. 

Following the incident, Castillo raised the issue with the school board. But some parents have continued to lambaste her for her advocacy at the time, sending her messages saying "the clown wants to continue her show."


"People are stating, 'well, English is the official language now, you shouldn't worry about any Spanish students now," Castillo said. 

Since she reported the alleged act of vandalism, the hate hasn't let up. 

"They're mocking my incident as if I'm doing this to get more votes instead of actually seeing it as a threat to a candidate, actually seeing it as violence," Castillo said. 

The hateful messages have come at the expense of her mental health, Castillo said. 


She has begun having anxiety attacks. She can't sleep at night. 

"I wake up and I'm just shaking," Castillo said. 

Her family feels unsafe to the point where they might consider moving if she doesn't win the election, Castillo said.

"It just reminds me of the little girl riding on the bus. Little Judy riding on the bus, eight years old, and being called a wetback," Castillo said. The term "wetback" is a derogatory term used for a Mexican citizen living in the U.S. 


"This is the time where we Latinos have to unite, because our students are our priority right now. Our students deserve to have an equal education like anyone else," Castillo added. 

For now, Castillo said she's showing up and talking to the community as election day approaches on May 3. 

"I'm just eagerly waiting for election day. I'm still going to go out to the polling places. I'm still going to greet people." 

Saturday, January 06, 2024

The ‘Southlake’ Podcast Is a Troubling Look at the Race Debate Tearing Apart a North Texas Suburb by Ian Dille

Friends:

Here is an honest reflection by author, Ian Dille, in the Texas Monthly on both his experiences as a white person growing up in Southlake public schools and the award-winning podcast, "Southlake." The series is centered on the virulent racism in this affluent, north Texas Carroll Independent School District that is undergoing demographic change. This is the same district that got national headlines for exposing a public school leader to balance the book on the Holocaust with opposing views. 

I concur with Dille's assessment of the podcast as "riveting and disturbing," taking the listener into the inner world of the district's school board politics that are in turn, about unabashed, unapologetic racism that has gotten so normalized that use of the "n-word" is simply how these wealthy kids talk. I don't know about you, but I grew up in conservative West Texas and I don't even think this way.

Did I hear it growing up? Yes, I did. And it was upsetting to me. Mexicans like myself grew up with racial slurs and we, too, were always made to think by white teachers and white people, generally, that we were inferior. It was baked into a school curriculum that excluded us—and largely excludes us today. 

In some reflections, I've referred to this as "the rejected self," born out of what I have termed, "subtractive cultural assimilation." My book, Subtractive Schooling, is fully about how these racial dynamics, albeit in a Houston high school, where I view these as features of everyday life for youth that work to disempower, as opposed to empower, them.

"Southlake" gives me that unsettling feeling that we're headed backwards as a society. I counterbalance that sentiment with the knowledge and awareness that we are nevertheless making positive strides and how this is good for Texas and the nation even if places like Southlake belie this. 

It would be incorrect to derive any conclusion that these racial dynamics are unique to Southlake, CISD. Rather the research suggests this to primarily be the case in middle-class, affluent districts undergoing rapid demographic change. 

I'll be focusing my own work this semester and in one class I'm teaching on school board and school district politics and policies and posting on the matter continuously. I'll have more to share. 

The podcast consists of 6 episodes that are between 30 and 42 minutes in length. It is well worth everybody's time. My husband and I listened to it in its entirety on a road trip we took a year ago. My students will listen to it, too. It's great for the college classroom.

A final comment is that it's hard for many white people to hear the truth of racism from Black and Brown people. They think we exaggerate or have a chip on our shoulder. It really does matter for writers like Ian Dille to put a face on white privilege and unaware racism.

We need more Ian Dilles in the world. Many more.

-Angela Valenzuela


The ‘Southlake’ Podcast Is a Troubling Look at the Race Debate Tearing Apart a North Texas Suburb

I grew up in Southlake and was mostly blind to the racism all around me. The NBC series changed my perspective.

By Ian Dille, Oct. 20, 2021 Texas Monthly

Host and NBC News correspondent Antonia Hylton reporting for the Southlake podcast.


In the fall of 1996, when I was a junior at Carroll High School in the North Texas suburb of Southlake, our football team faced off against Grapevine, the cross-town rival. Our team was all white; the Grapevine team was led by a Black wide receiver who would go on to play in the NFL. At the game, a group of Carroll students did something terrible: they began chanting the letters T-A-N-H-O, and one of them held up a sign bearing the same message. The acronym stood for “Tear a n—–’s head off.”  Only the student who held the sign was disciplined, and the punishment was mild: a two-week suspension from after-school activities and three days’ detention, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

NBC News reporters Mike Hixenbaugh (a former investigative reporter at the Houston Chronicle) and Antonia Hylton uncovered this incident during their research for the riveting, disturbing new NBC News podcast, Southlake. The six-part show documents a bitter conflict, dating back to 2018, over efforts to implement diversity education in the Carroll Independent School District. Last week, Southlake was in the news for its latest scandal: as Hixenbaugh and Hylton reported, a high-ranking district administrator suggested during a training session that teachers include “other perspectives” on the Holocaust. Similar debates over how (or even if) to teach about race and religion are raging across the state and the country; in the podcast, Southlake comes across not so much as an extreme outlier, but as Anytown, USA. Listening to the series was an uncomfortable experience that forced me to reconsider my own privileged upbringing in Southlake and the racism around me that I’d been blind to as a white kid. The podcast also helped start long-overdue conversations with my family and friends. As so many Texans grapple with these painful issues, Southlake is a must-listen.  

My family moved to Southlake in 1990, from Berkeley, California. During my eight years in Carroll public schools, I became a proud Dragon, the school district’s mascot. My experience at school was positive: I ran for the high school cross-country team (today a national powerhouse) and adored our coach. My journalism teacher inspired me to pursue the field professionally. 

As I grew up, I also watched Southlake transform from a relatively rural area with working-class roots into a gilded suburb. On the farmland that became Southlake Town Square—a throwback “Main Street” now lined with high-end restaurants and shops—my friends and I once drove four-wheelers and rode horses. The community is now wealthier—the median household income is more than $240,000—and less white than it was during my time there. Over the last ten years, Southlake Carroll schools have seen an increase in Asian and Hispanic students and a decline in white students, from 88 percent of the school population in 2008 to 67 percent in 2018. During that time, the population of Black students has remained between 2 and 3 percent. The average SAT score at Carroll High School in 2019 was 27 percent higher than the state average, and according to the school’s website, “approximately 98 percent of Carroll’s seniors go on to attend a college or university.” I still look back on my time there fondly—but listening to Southlake helped me see how the comfort of this privileged bubble shaped some elements of my own cultural ignorance. 

Case in point: I don’t recall hearing about the T-A-N-H-O incident during my time in Southlake, nor did I notice other racist jokes or slurs. However, in the podcast, Black students and parents attest that such experiences have been commonplace for decades. Carroll ISD’s efforts to implement a diversity education plan began in 2018, after a viral video showed white Southlake students chanting the N-word. In response, the school board hosted an open forum at which Black residents gave painful testimony, explaining how the video exemplified a pattern of racist abuse. In one clip from Southlake, a mother describes a sixth-grade boy joking to her child, “How do you get a Black out of a tree? You cut the rope.”

For decades, Black residents in Southlake (and in other towns across the state and nation) had endured such comments. But now it seemed that real change might occur. The district selected a 63-person committee and tasked it with drafting a Cultural Competence Action Plan. The plan aimed to better educate Carroll ISD’s students and staff on issues of race, culture, sexual identity, gender, and more. It also called for accountability, evaluating the district’s progress on cultural literacy. A newly hired head of diversity would help implement the plan. After more than a year of work, the district released a first draft of the plan in the summer of 2020—amid a global pandemic, in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, and at the height of the U.S. presidential campaign. 

The reception was rocky, to put it mildly. Some parents praised the plan, saying it prepared students to succeed in an increasingly diverse world. A much more vocal group accused the school district of attempting to implement critical race theory and indoctrinate students with liberal and Marxist ideologies. Two school board trustees were indicted for violating the Texas Open Meetings Act—because they discussed an upcoming vote via text message—and a judge placed a temporary restraining order on the plan (an appeals court lifted the order last week). The formation of a well-funded conservative PAC, Southlake Families, turned a local election in May 2021 into a referendum on the Cultural Competence Action Plan—and Southlake’s future. Every candidate backed by the PAC won.

Through in-the-moment reporting, heartfelt interviews, and secret recordings, Hylton and Hixenbaugh weave an engrossing, troubling saga. A variety of compelling characters, including Black Dallas Cowboys players, lend emotional depth to the series. The first episode focuses on the experience of Robin Cornish, the wife of former Cowboys center Frank Cornish. Following Frank’s unexpected death from a heart attack in 2008, the city of Southlake honored his legacy of community engagement by naming a park after him. But in 2017, a memorial plaque at the park was defaced with the message “KKK w[ill] get You Black People.” That incident, along with numerous other racist indignities, led Robin to become a champion of the school’s diversity plan.

The Cowboys’ former defensive tackle and Super Bowl champion, Russell Maryland, also appears as a key member of the District Diversity Council, the group tasked with crafting the school district’s plan. Maryland is measured but passionate in discussing the cultural challenges facing Southlake. “The work is going to continue,” he says in episode five. “It has to, because our kids are reliant on us, and they’re the ones who are suffering. And if we don’t, they’ll continue to suffer.”

Listening to Maryland and Cornish speak up and describe their efforts to help Southlake do better, I felt inspired. It was also incredibly frustrating and heartbreaking to listen to them recount the vitriolic opposition to the diversity plan that they and others had worked so hard on. That same sense of heartbreak comes through in the voices of students who advocate for the plan. 

In episode two, we’re taken inside the Carroll High principal’s office. It’s 2019, and a seventeen-year-old student, Raven Rolle, who’s Black, has reported a white student for using the N-word. Fed up with the lack of support from school administrators, Rolle secretly records the meeting.  

The Texas drawl of principal Shawn Duhon gave me an odd sense of comfort, taking me back to my own—um, multiple—trips to the Carroll High principal’s office. Duhon attempts to provide a teachable moment, but clearly lacks the training, tools, and language to effectively address the conflict. In the principal’s office, the white student tells Rolle, “To me, it’s just a word.” Rolle is understandably upset, replying, “Because you’re white!” Instead of immediately correcting the offending student, Duhon tries to calm Rolle and advises her on navigating future racist incidents. “When you see ignorance like that, you can’t let them take your joy,” Duhon says.  

The notion that Black residents should assimilate to Southlake’s culture, and not the other way around, comes to the fore in episode three, when impassioned parents speak out against the district’s proposed diversity plan at a school board meeting. They echo points made by some Black scholars, such as linguist John McWhorter, who’s argued that singling out people of color as victims diminishes them and their ability to succeed. In the podcast, we hear from many well-meaning parents (from a range of ethnic backgrounds) who insist that race is not a barrier, to an extent that limits further conversations about race, diversity, and culture. One father tells the school board that his eight- and eleven-year-old-children “have never heard the N-word,” and expresses concern his kids will learn a bad word as part of Southlake Carroll’s diversity-education efforts. “You know where they’re going to hear the N-word from? You. You guys. You guys are going to teach my kids what the N-word is,” the father says. He doesn’t seem to have considered the possibility that he could use the debate as an opportunity to talk with his kids and teach them himself.

That’s what I tried to do, however imperfectly and awkwardly, with my own family after listening to the Southlake series. As I discussed the podcast with my mom while prepping for a Sunday dinner, my eight-year-old son lifted his head from his Legos and asked, “Dad, what’s the N-word?” Later that evening, my wife and I told him about the word, what it meant, and why he shouldn’t use it. Talking to my sister, who is Black, ten years older than me, and never lived in Southlake, I learned she “never felt comfortable” when she came to visit. She reminded me that when I was eleven, the owners of a Southlake horse-riding school gave me a Confederate flag to carry in a town parade. My parents politely requested a different flag.

Southlake effectively shows how the Texas Republican party helped sow divisions over the diversity plan. In a speech to Southlake residents, former Texas GOP chairman Allen West urged the audience to welcome new neighbors with a pecan pie, and then inquire about the newcomers’ political ideologies, asking, “Now, why are you here?” In another secret recording in episode five, the Southlake Families PAC vets school board candidates. The questions, including “Who did you vote for in the 2020 presidential election?” are unrelated to the nonpartisan duties of the school board. 

But it’s not just political parties that have something to gain from this divisive framing. The dramatic tone of NBC’s storytelling forced me to reflect on the role of the media in fanning the flames of so-called culture wars. The series frequently uses the language of war to characterize the conflict as a “fight” or “battle,” casting those for the diversity plan and those against it as “warring parties.” Winners are pitted against losers, with little discussion of how to find common ground. This problem is bigger than any one podcast or news report.

There are signs of progress, however. Sources ranging from Harvard professors to PBS Kids are offering guidance on educating children about race. In the spring of 2020, the Texas State Board of Education unanimously approved African American Studies as a high school elective, exposing thousands of students to a more complete view of Black history.  

Whether progress is happening in Southlake is less clear. If anything, the district may be continuing to veer toward the far right. In the podcast’s bonus episode, a school board member who recently stepped down reveals that a revision of the diversity plan removed much of the language around “microaggressions,” a term many Southlake residents opposed. A judge lifted the temporary restraining order on the Cultural Competence Action Plan last Thursday, and sent the lawsuit alleging that school board members violated the Open Meetings Act back to trial court for further review. The current Carroll ISD school board can now move forward with revisions, approval, and implementation of the diversity plan. However, such movement appears unlikely.

In the May election, candidates endorsed by the Southlake Families PAC won school board seats by a seventy-to-thirty margin. Rather than working to increase students’ cultural literacy, the school district has begun restricting educational materials available to students.

A parent holds a sign during a meeting of the Carroll ISD school board on May 3, 2021. Some attendees protested the district’s diversity plan.Courtesy of NBC News


At the start of the 2021 school year, the newly installed school board members formally reprimanded a fourth-grade teacher after a student checked out This Book Is Anti-Racist by author Tiffany Jewell from the classroom library. The incident created confusion and concern among Southlake teachers, who were told to close their classroom libraries until their books could be vetted. In protest, some teachers strung caution tape and black paper across their bookshelves. 

Resistance to conversations about race is nothing new to Southlake. Back in 1996, following the T-A-N-H-O incident, one of my few Black classmates and his family members called out the school district in an article that appeared in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. The family banded together with 26 other Black families in Southlake, and the group requested a meeting with the superintendent. But the superintendent refused to meet with them collectively, saying, as summarized by the Star-Telegram, that “the incidents were isolated and do not reflect the attitudes of all Carroll High School students.”

During my time at Carroll, teachers rarely discussed race and privilege in class. Lessons about Martin Luther King Jr. and the civil rights movement were presented in historical context, divorced from our current reality—for example, the 1991 beating of Rodney King. Representation in the form of Black educators and administrators was minimal to nonexistent. And after graduating, I entered the world lacking empathy. When I initially failed to get into the University of Texas at Austin, I felt wronged by the state’s newly enacted “top 10 percent” rule (a replacement for affirmative action), and complained that kids from poorer, less-competitive school districts got an advantage. 

There’s a telling moment in the final episode of Southlake, when Hylton interviews newly installed superintendent Lane Ledbetter, the son of legendary Southlake football coach and athletic director Bob Ledbetter. Hylton asks him, “Is there racism in Southlake, and in Carroll ISD?” 

Ledbetter is caught off guard, momentarily speechless. “I didn’t know that was going to be asked,” he says, and then pivots to an unrelated talking point. It’s clear that he, as well as Southlake more broadly, still isn’t quite ready to answer that simple query.