Trump pressured states to limit undocumented high school studentsโ access to career education programs
By Matt Barnum and Lily Altavena, Chalkbeat
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At least three states have taken steps to restrict undocumented high school studentsโ access to dual enrollment and career-technical education programs, according to documents reviewed by Chalkbeat. In one state, the policy was reversed following Chalkbeat inquiries.
These moves come asย efforts to limit educational fundingย forย undocumented immigrants ramp up nationwide. They build on controversial guidance from the Trump administration that restricted federally funded preschool and adult education programs to citizens and legal residents.
But these state actions are particularly striking because they chip away at protections based on the U.S. Supreme Courtโs Plyler v. Doe decision, which requires public schools to serve all students, including those who lack legal permission to be in the country. They suggest the Trump administration has made more progress than previously reported in eroding the protections enshrined in the ruling, long a conservative target.
In Virginia, nearly every school district quietly agreed to exclude undocumented students from participating in certain federally funded career-and-technical education programs, according to records obtained by Chalkbeat.
It is not clear how many undocumented students actually lost access to programming. But at least one school district in Virginia was denied $150,000 in federal funding because it didnโt agree to exclude those students.
On Thursday, after repeated Chalkbeat questions, the state education department said it was abandoning the policy. School districts will no longer be required to restrict undocumented studentsโ access. The original policy came under the stateโs previous Republican administration. The department is now led by a Democratic appointee.
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