When Trump Is Done, What Will Remain of Public Education?

Article/Op-Ed in The New York Times
An apple with MAGA carved into it.
Ben Denzer
April 8, 2025

​For The New York Times, Adam Harris examines the Trump administration's recent actions affecting education, highlighting how schools and students nationwide are being affected.

Last week, the Trump administration threatened to withhold funding specifically from schools and school districts with high shares of low-income students if they did not verify in 10 days the elimination of certain diversity, equity and inclusion practices. Craig Trainor, the acting assistant secretary for civil rights at the department, declared in a release announcing the memo, “Federal financial assistance is a privilege, not a right.”

This is not the first time that the Department of Education has outlined the Trump administration’s interpretation of civil rights law. States are already required to certify that they will comply with federal antidiscrimination laws — as New York officials noted when they refused to comply with the administration’s demands.

What makes the latest guidance from the department so pernicious is that it specifically targets Title I funding, which goes to schools that tend to have higher percentages of students of color.

The willingness of the administration to target schools serving low-income students for noncompliance with its interpretation of federal civil rights law illustrates its commitment to returning American education to a time before the Civil Rights Act, when the nation’s most vulnerable students were largely unprotected.

Read the full article here.