
The morning after Election Day last year, Melanie Claros, a civics teacher and ESL coordinator at a South Florida school where half the students are Latino, found herself having to do a job beyond her usual duties. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. By the end of the day, she recently told NBC News, more than two dozen students had separately approached her to ask about changes to immigration enforcement ahead of another Donald Trump presidency.
Main Idea: Educators are worried about how to support students and families, including Melanie Claros, as Donald Trump’s planned immigration crackdown raises fears of deportations and school absences.
Key Points:
Fear of mass deportations could keep immigrant families from sending children to school, hurting attendance, learning, and local communities.
Schools may improve emergency planning for students if deportation fears rise.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Civics teacher and ESL coordinator whose experiences and comments about students’ immigration fears are a central thread in.
His promised mass deportation agenda is the main policy backdrop driving the educators’ concerns.
Teacher and DACA recipient whose own uncertainty and family reassurance are part of the article’s human impact.
Nonprofit providing training and guidance to schools preparing for possible immigration enforcement actions.
School district communications leader quoted on how her district is supporting students and handling immigration questions.
Co-founder of ImmSchools who describes schools’ reluctance and the demand for training.
Public school district mentioned as an example of a district with a significant English-learner population responding to the.
Comments here are the same thread shown when this article appears in The Pulse.
No comments on this article yet.
Sign in to commentESL teacher cited as an example of school-level concern from educators in another state.