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The Trump Effect: The Impact of the Presidential Campaign on Our Nation's Schools

Our report found that the campaign is producing an alarming level of fear and anxiety among children of color and inflaming racial and ethnic tensions in the classroom. Many students worry about being deported.

If you would like a .pdf version of this report, please click here. If you would like to read the full comments from the survey, please click here.

Every four years, teachers in the United States use the presidential election to impart valuable lessons to students about the electoral process, democracy, government and the responsibilities聽of citizenship.

But, for students and teachers alike, this year鈥檚 primary season is starkly different from any in recent memory. The results of an online survey conducted by suggest that the campaign is having a profoundly negative effect on children and classrooms.

It鈥檚 producing an alarming level of fear and anxiety among children of color and inflaming racial and ethnic tensions in the classroom. Many students worry about being deported.

Other students have been emboldened by the divisive, often juvenile rhetoric in the campaign. Teachers have noted an increase in bullying, harassment and intimidation of students whose races, religions or nationalities have been the verbal targets of candidates on the campaign trail.

Educators are perplexed and conflicted about what to do. They report being stymied by the need to remain nonpartisan but disturbed by the anxiety in their classrooms and the lessons that children may be absorbing from this campaign.

Two responses from teachers illustrate their dilemma. A teacher in Arlington, Virginia, says, 鈥淚 try to not bring it up since it is so stressful for my students.鈥 Another, in Indianapolis, Indiana, says, 鈥淚 am at a point where I鈥檓 going to take a stand even if it costs me my position.鈥

Our survey of approximately 2,000 K-12 teachers was not scientific. Our email subscribers and those who visit our website are not a random sample of teachers nationally, and those who chose to respond to our survey are likely to be those who are most concerned about the impact of the presidential campaign on their students and schools.

But the data we collected is the richest source of information that we know of about the effect of the presidential campaign on education in our country. And there is nothing counterintuitive about the results. They show a disturbing nationwide problem, one that is particularly acute in schools with high concentrations of minority children.

Here are the highlights:

  • More than two-thirds of the teachers reported that students鈥攎ainly immigrants, children of immigrants and Muslims鈥攈ave expressed concerns or fears about what might happen to them or their families after the election.
  • More than half have seen an increase in uncivil political discourse.
  • More than one-third have observed an increase in anti-Muslim or anti-immigrant sentiment.
  • More than 40 percent are hesitant to teach about the election.

The comments are particularly revealing.

The survey did not identify any candidates. But out of 5,000 total comments, more than 1,000 mentioned Donald Trump. In contrast, a total of fewer than 200 contained the names Ted Cruz, Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clinton. During the campaign, Trump has spoken of deporting millions of Latino immigrants, building a wall between the United States and Mexico, banning Muslim immigrants and even killing the families of Islamist terrorists. He has also called Mexican immigrants 鈥渞apists鈥 and drug dealers.

鈥淢y students are terrified of Donald Trump,鈥 says one teacher from a middle school with a large population of African-American Muslims. 鈥淭hey think that if he鈥檚 elected, all black people will get sent back to Africa.鈥

In state after state, teachers report similar fears among minority children.

In Virginia, an elementary school teacher says students are 鈥渃rying in the classroom and having meltdowns at home.鈥 In Oregon, a K-3 teacher says her black students are 鈥渃oncerned for their safety because of what they see on TV at Trump rallies.鈥 In North Carolina, a high school teacher says she has 鈥淟atino students who carry their birth certificates and Social Security cards to school because they are afraid they will be deported.鈥

Some of the stories are heartbreaking. In Tennessee, a kindergarten teacher says a Latino child鈥攖old by classmates that he will be deported and trapped behind a wall鈥攁sks every day, 鈥淚s the wall here yet?鈥

Many children, however, are not afraid at all. Rather, some are using the word Trump as a taunt or as a chant as they gang up on others. Muslim children are being called terrorist or ISIS or bomber.

鈥淪tudents are hearing more hate language than I have ever heard at our school before,鈥 says a high school teacher in Helena, Montana. Another teacher reports that a fifth-grader told a Muslim student 鈥渢hat he was supporting Donald Trump because he was going to kill all of the Muslims if he became president!鈥

The long-term impact on children鈥檚 well-being, their behavior or their civic education is impossible to gauge. Some teachers report that their students are highly engaged and interested in the political process this year. Others worry that the election is making them 鈥渓ess trusting of government鈥 or 鈥渉ostile to opposing points of view,鈥 or that children are 鈥渓osing respect for the political process.鈥

For the sake of children and their education, presidential candidates should begin modeling the kind of civil behavior and civic values that we all want children to learn in school. Barring such a change in tone, however, teachers and school administrators will face an uphill battle. Remaining impartial will be difficult when the students鈥 conversation revolves largely around Trump.

But we urge educators not to abandon their teaching about the election, to use instances of incivility as teaching moments, and to support the children who are hurt, confused and frightened by what they鈥檙e hearing from the candidates. Our specific findings from the survey follow.

Schools are, by design, institutions that strive to teach citizenship. But the lessons in many classrooms look different this year. Photo credit: Getty Images

Impact on Students

Every student, from preschoolers up through high school, is aware of the tone, rhetoric and catchphrases of this particular campaign season. Students are hearing conversations at home. They鈥檙e chatting, posting and joking on social media. Whether teachers decide to bring it into the classroom or not, kids are talking about it, modeling their behavior on that of political candidates and bringing heightened emotion to school along with their backpacks.

One California teacher noted, 鈥淵ouTube, Instagram and Twitter make everything 鈥榣ive鈥 and interactive.鈥 Some students attend candidates鈥 rallies. And then there is the endless cycle of talk radio, 24-hour news and cable comedy shows. 鈥淭he explosive headlines and conversations have caught their attention,鈥 a middle school teacher in Providence, Rhode Island, wrote about her students. 鈥淭hey want to talk about a cartoon/headline/video they saw.鈥

The 2016 campaign and the antics of its contestants are omnipresent. As one Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, elementary school teacher told us, 鈥淪hying away from difficult conversations doesn鈥檛 mean the conversations aren鈥檛 taking place.鈥 A Portland, Oregon, middle school teacher reported that her principal had imposed a 鈥済ag order鈥 on teachers, prohibiting them from talking about the election. But the order didn鈥檛 stop one of her students from telling an immigrant classmate, 鈥淲hen Trump wins, you and your family will get sent back.鈥 On the survey she posed the question, 鈥淲hat does a teacher do? I can assure you that if a student says that loudly and brazenly in class, far worse is happening in the hallway.鈥

For almost all students, the campaign is personal and their support or opposition to candidates鈥攁ctually to one candidate mainly鈥攊s intense. But the effect of the campaign on students depends very much on where they stand in the school pecking order. Those who have been marginalized in the past are bearing the brunt of behavior and comments that often cross over into abuse.

Marginalized students are 鈥渢errified鈥

Over two-thirds (67 percent) of educators reported that young people in their schools鈥攎ost often immigrants, children of immigrants, Muslims, African Americans and other students of color鈥攈ad expressed concern about what might happen to them or their families after the election. Close to one-third of the students in American classrooms are children of foreign-born parents. This year, they are scared, stressed and in need of reassurance and support from teachers. Muslim children are harassed and worried. Even native-born African-American children, whose families arrived here before the American Revolution, ask about being sent back to Africa. Others, especially younger students, have worries that are the stuff of nightmares, like a return to slavery or being rounded up and put into camps. Overall, these vulnerable students are disillusioned and depressed at the hatred they鈥檙e hearing from candidates, in the news, from classmates and even, sometimes, from trusted adults. They鈥檙e discouraged to find out what people really think. Teachers struggle to help them feel safe.

Undocumented students or students with undocumented family members are especially vulnerable. These students have a legal right to a public school education, but many of them come to school every day fearful that their families will be separated. Teachers, in general, are very protective of students and sensitive to their pain.

Man holds anti-Muslim sign
Anti-Muslim sentiment in the U.S. has risen steadily since the 2016 election season began. Schools are no exception. Photo credit: AP Images/Tony Gutierrez

Fears are pervasive. Students tell teachers they are worried about deportation, having their families split, being put in jail or attacked by police, losing their homes, seeing their places of worship closed, going into hiding and being sent to detention camps. Some Muslim students think that, if Trump becomes president, they will have microchips implanted under their skin.

Students are stressed and anxious in a way that is threatening their health, emotional well-being and their schoolwork. We heard from dozens of educators about young students who expressed daily worries about 鈥渂eing sent back鈥 or having their parents sent back. In many cases, the students are American citizens or come from families that are here legally. It doesn鈥檛 matter: Regardless of immigration status, they feel under attack. We heard about students from second grade to high school crying in class.

A Tennessee kindergarten teacher reported that she has a student who asks her every day if the wall has been built yet. 鈥淚magine the fear in my students鈥 eyes when they look to me for the truth,鈥 she said.

In Massachusetts, an elementary school social worker described what was happening to her 8-year-old son, who was adopted from Korea. 鈥淗e came home from school and recounted a conversation he鈥檇 had with his friends on the playground. Many 鈥 come from immigrant families and/or are black or brown. He told me they know that if Donald Trumpet [sic] was elected that we would have to move to another continent to be safe and that there would be a big war. He is very nervous about being sent away with my husband who is also Korean American.鈥

Stressed students have a harder time learning, and we saw many reports that anxiety was having an impact on grades and ability to concentrate. In Washington state, a teacher told us about a 10-year-old boy who can鈥檛 sleep at night because he is worried his immigrant parents will be sent away. A California art teacher described a fifth-grader who had begun having 鈥渇ull-blown panic attacks.鈥 After fellow students in Washington state had repeatedly shouted slurs from their cars at one Muslim teenager, her teacher reported, the girl expressed suicidal thoughts.

For immigrants whose home countries are unsafe places to which they can鈥檛 return, the fear is 鈥渢remendous and profound.鈥 One teacher observed that the campaign season is particularly traumatizing for students who have 鈥渟uffered through exile, migration and even asylum.鈥 Others reported that their Iraqi and Syrian students are terrified of being sent back to their war-torn countries.

They鈥檙e not just scared. Teachers used words like 鈥渉urt鈥 and 鈥渄ejected鈥 to describe the impact on their charges. The ideas and language coming from the presidential candidates are bad enough, but many students鈥擬uslim, Hispanic and African-American鈥攁re far more upset by the number of people, including classmates and even teachers, who seem to agree with Trump. They are struggling with the belief that 鈥渆veryone hates them.鈥

An elementary school administrator in Vancouver, Washington, wrote, 鈥淪tudents who had undocumented family members and relatives are afraid of what other kids will think of them if they find out. One [fourth-grade] student reported that she thought everyone hated her because her mother was illegal and she didn鈥檛 want to come to school. Over 35 percent of our students are Mexican. I鈥檝e never had this 鈥 before this year.鈥

African-American students aren鈥檛 exempt from the fears. Many teachers reported an increase in use of the n-word as a slur, even among very young children. And black children are burdened with a particularly awful fear that has been reported from teachers in many states鈥攖hat they will 鈥渂e deported to Africa鈥 or that slavery will be reinstated. As an Oklahoma elementary teacher explains, 鈥淢y kids are terrified of Trump becoming [p]resident. They believe he can/will deport them鈥攁nd NONE of them are Hispanic. They are all African American.鈥

Even in schools where a majority of students are African American and don鈥檛 face racial taunts on the playground, students feel uneasy. A teacher in Ferguson, Missouri, where nearly nine out of 10 students are African American, says, 鈥淲e do not have the language and hate of any candidates repeated at the high school where I teach. 鈥 However, I do hear students wonder if they are being let in on what all white people truly think and feel. This is so disappointing and hard to combat.鈥

According to their teachers, these vulnerable students feel that Trump is a 鈥渞ich racist who hates them.鈥 Young children can鈥檛 understand why people hate them without even knowing them. One teacher鈥檚 comment, 鈥淚t breaks my heart,鈥 was echoed by dozens of others.

Another wrote simply that, in her diverse school, 鈥淢y students have one thing in common. Apparently America hates them.鈥

Students are confused. Their teachers have worked hard鈥攁nd often successfully鈥攖o teach them about American ideals. They are, according to one Boston high school teacher, 鈥渃onfused as to how a person who has no respect for American ideals can be so popular.鈥 On one hand, they are taught that the United States is a nation of immigrants, but their current experience doesn鈥檛 match the lesson. Many immigrant students feel that 鈥渢hey don鈥檛 belong here鈥 and they have 鈥渘o value鈥 to the country.

All students, regardless of whether they are members of targeted groups, are vulnerable to the stress. Kids are worried about their friends and want to protect them. A Minnesota teacher wrote about her own middle school daughter who felt terribly guilty after a 鈥渄ear Muslim friend was called a 鈥榯errorist鈥 by another classmate.鈥 The teacher reported, 鈥淲e had a lengthy conversation about what to do if there was a 鈥榥ext time.鈥欌

Teachers struggle to provide safety in their classrooms and reassurance to their students. Often that means breaking their usual rule against discussing their own politics and assuring children who 鈥渂eg [them] not to vote for Trump because he will send their parents out of the country鈥 that, indeed, they will not. Others try to explain how our system actually works, underscoring the point that the president alone doesn鈥檛 make laws, or that it鈥檚 unlikely Mr. Trump will actually be elected. But, as one California teacher explained, 鈥淚 have tried to reassure my students that no matter the outcome, they will be okay. I don鈥檛 even know if that鈥檚 true, but I can鈥檛 have them worry and stress about it.鈥

Teachers work to keep their classrooms respectful. Often that means constant reminders that the rules for classroom discussion aren鈥檛 the same as the rules on the debate stage. Sometimes it means declaring some things off limits. 鈥淚 really don鈥檛 want to have his [Trump鈥檚] name invoked in my classroom,鈥 said a teacher from Pennsylvania. 鈥淚t feels like it makes it an unsafe place for my students of color.鈥

And often, it means expressing affection. A teacher at a Virginia Title I (high poverty) school where nearly two-thirds of the students are Hispanic said, 鈥淢y second-graders are scared. They鈥檙e scared of being sent back to their home countries. They鈥檙e scared of losing their education. As their teacher, I hug them each day to let them know they are safe and they are loved.鈥

Students seem 鈥渆mboldened鈥

The gains made by years of anti-bullying work in schools have been rolled back in a few short months. Teachers report that students have been 鈥渆mboldened鈥 to use slurs, engage in name-calling and make inflammatory statements toward each other. When confronted, students point to the candidates and claim they are 鈥渏ust saying what everyone is thinking.鈥 Kids use the names of candidates as pejoratives to taunt each other.

If marginalized students are fearful and hurting, it鈥檚 partly because other 鈥渟tudents seem emboldened to make bigoted and inflammatory statements about minorities, immigrants, the poor, etc.,鈥 wrote a high school teacher in Michigan.

Teachers in New Hampshire鈥攚here the first primary was held鈥攔eported some of the greatest increases in disturbing behavior. One high school teacher from Westmoreland wrote, 鈥淎 lot of students think we should kill any and all people we do not agree with. They also think that all Muslims are the same and are a threat to our country and way of life. They believe all Muslims want to kill us.鈥

Muslim students鈥攁long with the Sikh and Hindu students who are mistaken for Muslims鈥攈ave endured heightened levels of abuse. According to reports from around the nation, Muslim students regularly endure being called ISIS, terrorist or bomber. These opinions are expressed boldly and often. Even in schools where such behavior isn鈥檛 tolerated, current-events discussions often become uncomfortable for teachers and Muslim students.

The harassment of students who are immigrants or children of immigrants is another particular problem, because nearly one-third of U.S. public school students have foreign-born parents. Teachers in every state reported hostile language aimed at immigrants, mainly Mexicans. A Wisconsin middle school teacher told us, 鈥淥penly racist statements towards Mexican students have increased. Mexican students are worried.鈥 A middle school teacher in Anaheim, California, reported, 鈥淜ids tell other kids that soon they will be deported.鈥 Regardless of their ethnic background or even their immigration or citizenship status, targeted students are taunted with talk of a wall or threats of forcible removal.

Neither are the slurs limited to schools with immigrant populations. 鈥淎t the all-white school where I teach, 鈥榙irty Mexican鈥 has become a common insult,鈥 a Wisconsin middle school educator said. 鈥淏efore election season it was never heard.鈥 Indeed, what teachers described鈥攕lurs and negative comments repeatedly directed at particular students or groups of students鈥攊s essentially the definition of bullying. In recent years, a large swath of the American public has been alerted to the dangerous effect of bullying on school children. It affects health, academic achievement and, in some cases, leads to self-harm. As a result of efforts at both the state and federal levels, schools now have comprehensive policies and programs to prevent and address bullying. In many schools, these programs have made a real difference in creating a culture of respect. The educators who reported that the election wasn鈥檛 having too much of an effect cited their school鈥檚 values and commitment to civility.

In other places, much of that hard work鈥攁chieved over years鈥攊s being undone. A Michigan middle school teacher described an exchange that followed an anti-bullying assembly: 鈥淚 had students tell me it [insults, name-calling, trash talk] isn鈥檛 bullying, they鈥檙e just 鈥榯elling it like it is.鈥欌

Or, as a New Mexico high school teacher lamented, 鈥淎ny unity developed by Mix It Up at lunchtime has flown out the window.鈥

It鈥檚 not just that 鈥渢hey seem to talk more smack,鈥 as one Sacramento, California, elementary teacher wrote. The campaign has actually become part of the new bullying vocabulary. One New Orleans teacher told us, 鈥淪tudents have used support of candidates as a 鈥榙is.鈥欌

We heard reports that both elementary and middle school students have taken to chanting, 鈥淭rump! Trump! Trump!鈥 in a 鈥渢aunting tone.鈥 Others cited an increase in the use of words like loser and deadbeat. The bullying crosses party lines. An Albuquerque, New Mexico, middle school teacher identified 鈥渁n anti-Trump bias鈥 among her students, 鈥渁nd ridicule for those who might support Trump.鈥

Behavior is harder to manage鈥攁nd explain

Teachers report an increase in anger and 鈥渁cting out鈥 among students and a decreased ability to engage in civil discourse. Discussions turn into shouting matches, verbal hostility and sometimes even fights.

鈥淪tudents have become very hostile to opposing points of view, regardless of the topic,鈥 a Jefferson, Georgia, high school teacher wrote, adding, 鈥淎ny division now elicits anger and personal attacks.鈥

In Pampa, Texas, where 50 percent of the students are Hispanic, 鈥淭he word 鈥楾rump鈥 is enough to derail a class,鈥 reported a middle school teacher. Especially in middle school, where behavior is notoriously hard to manage, discourse spirals quickly into anger. We heard multiple accounts of students yelling at each other, and 鈥渋ncreased hostility in conversations between students.鈥 A New York City middle teacher put it succinctly: 鈥淪tudents on both sides are angry.鈥

Angry words can escalate quickly. 鈥淢y fifth-graders got in a fist fight on the playground yesterday,鈥 a Queens, New York, teacher wrote. 鈥淚t started when one of the boys quoted Donald Trump.鈥

Clearly, educators want to prevent those kinds of fights while encouraging a lively exchange of ideas in healthy debate. One of the goals of education is to teach students how to make persuasive arguments, support opinions with facts and listen to the perspectives of others. Those goals are out the window in many classrooms. A Biddeford, Maine, middle school teacher observed that, 鈥淪tudents are quick to become accusatory and condemn others for having a different point of view.鈥

Another middle school teacher in Indiana wrote, 鈥淪tudents are more apt to get into shouting matches than to have a discussion about something.鈥


Students in Merrillville, Indiana, found themselves in the news after chanting, "Build a wall!" during a basketball game against a rival team made up of mostly Latino players. Photo credit: AP Images/Jonathan Miano

For some students, this level of conflict is hard to handle. 鈥淎 student said he鈥檇 prefer another Obama term, and it angered another student who has been vocal about her support of Donald Trump,鈥 a Texas high school teacher said. 鈥淭he angry student began yelling, 鈥榃hat is the matter with you?鈥 and 鈥楾his is why I HATE people.鈥

While the increased tension sends some students into tears, other, often older students, are more likely to find the campaign a springboard to adolescent humor. The comments indicated that students in middle and high school, especially boys, seem to have a hard time distinguishing between entertainment and politics. Not only do they see the campaign, the candidates and the debates as a joke, but they鈥檙e missing the fact that something significant is happening.

鈥淢y students seem more interested in the campaign this year, but only in the same way they are interested in circling a couple of kids who are about to fight on the playground,鈥 wrote a sixth-grade teacher from Roseville, California. 鈥淚t is pure entertainment.鈥 A Boston high school teacher laments, 鈥淥ur students see the whole presidential campaign as a game, with the real common people having no real input.鈥

Sometimes a joke just isn鈥檛 funny, and students are learning that the hard way. A Chicago elementary school teacher reported, 鈥淪ome of the first-graders were talking about who their parents voted for. One jumped in, apparently as a joke (because the students are old enough to know that Donald Trump is an easy butt of a joke), and said 鈥榃hat about Donald Trump?鈥 His friends, not realizing he was joking, proceeded to yell at him until he cried.鈥

A consistent theme from teachers across grade levels was that their students understood the behavior on display isn鈥檛 okay. Middle school students on New York鈥檚 Long Island 鈥渁re confused as to how certain campaigns have been allowed to promote racism, violence and hate.鈥 And high school students in Lake Worth, Florida, display 鈥渓ots of negativity about the candidates and the way they speak鈥 and 鈥渄iscuss the immaturity of some of the rhetoric presented by adults.鈥

Or, as a middle school administrator from Omak, Washington, commented, 鈥淪tudents do not understand why this has become such an angry and dishonorable campaign. They are taught better behavior by their teachers, and then they see this mess on TV and are confused.鈥

Impact on Teaching

Conventional wisdom and common sense dictate that teachers keep their partisan politics out of the classroom. This year, though, educators are finding it tough to remain nonpartisan when all the talk about civility鈥攕omething they need to uphold in schools鈥攊s primarily commentary on a single candidate. In general, they鈥檝e chosen one of three ways forward. Some, mainly experienced social studies teachers, are doing what they鈥檝e always done. Others are making significant changes, opting either to abandon neutrality or focus on something specific to this year鈥檚 campaign, like the use of rhetoric. And others, including 50 percent of elementary school teachers who responded to the survey, are simply avoiding it altogether.

The biggest curriculum challenge is figuring what, whether or how to teach about the election. In most presidential election years, students from kindergarten to high school get some exposure to the process and the candidates. Elementary teachers festoon classrooms with red, white and blue, conduct mock elections, and use the campaign to reinforce lessons on geography, the presidency and the importance of voting. In middle and high school, social studies teachers take a deeper dive into both the process and the issues; they may stage mock debates and voting registration drives for graduating seniors.

But it鈥檚 different this year.

Teachers who normally don鈥檛 teach civics are getting involved. In San Diego, a high school teacher explained, 鈥淚 am not a history teacher, but the issues of this election are spilling over into everything.鈥 And in Arlington, Texas, another high school teacher worried about her students who have told her they 鈥渇eel alienated from a particular math teacher who advocates for Trump.鈥

Teachers whose lessons would usually involve the election are struggling to make plans this year. Some are resolutely plowing ahead, focusing discussion on issues, insisting students support their claims with evidence from credible sources. Among the stalwarts who responded to the survey, a few were downright enthusiastic, like the middle school teacher from New Mexico who wrote, 鈥淭he students are more vocal about this election and it鈥檚 a great opportunity to educate them on the facts versus gossip about all presidential campaigns. It鈥檚 also a great opportunity to teach them about media bias.鈥

But even educators committed to teaching in a way that would allow students to draw valid conclusions are struggling to find factual age-appropriate information. Over and over, when telling what they need, teachers listed factual candidate profiles, facts about the issues and fact-based explanations of the policy differences. More than one respondent reported launching a vast exercise on media literacy and fact checking, turning to sites like PolitiFact (home of the Truth-O-Meter) and procon.com.

鈥淎voiding it鈥

Many educators, worried about maintaining both objectivity and order, are tiptoeing around the campaign. In response to the statement 鈥淚 am hesitant to teach about the 2016 presidential election,鈥 43 percent of K-12 educators answered 鈥測es.鈥 That percentage shifts depending on the age of the students taught; while only 37 percent of high school teachers indicated hesitation, half the respondents who teach in elementary schools indicated they were thinking twice.

Some teachers are simply avoiding the campaign altogether. 鈥淚鈥檓 staying completely away from teaching about this election,鈥 said an Anchorage, Alaska, elementary teacher. From a teacher in Maryland: 鈥淚 have just stopped.鈥 In Hawaii: 鈥淚 try not to talk about it.鈥 In California: 鈥淚 refuse to teach it.鈥

Avoiding the issue doesn鈥檛 sit well with many teachers. A New York middle school administrator who saw his staff 鈥渢iptoeing,鈥 explained, 鈥淚t is so inflammatory that no one wants to even discuss it. Not good when we should be talking about issues.鈥 In San Antonio, one teacher knew her young students were missing out. 鈥淟ast election was amazing in my class!鈥 she wrote. 鈥淲e even learned about electoral votes using other first-grade classrooms. Not this year!! Not touching it!!! Not sure what鈥檚 worse, the candidates or what they stand for!!鈥

The avoidance often arises from a desire to maintain civility and keep kids safe and calm. In Arlington, Virginia, a teacher explained, 鈥淚 try to not bring it up since it is so stressful for my students.鈥 Even in high school, 鈥淚 try to be more careful鈥攔ather than stoke the fires,鈥 wrote one Utah teacher. In Kansas, a high school teacher sounded apologetic as she explained, 鈥淚 bring it up twice a month out of obligation.鈥

The possibility of parental complaints or crossing a principal鈥檚 directive has had a distinctly chilling effect on teachers鈥 willingness to bring the election into class. 鈥淢y principal does not want us discussing politics with the kids,鈥 one Virginia teacher said. To the west in Colorado, an elementary teacher told us students in her school were arguing so much that 鈥淲e have been asked by our principal to encourage students to save political discussions for home with their parents and with peers outside of school.鈥 Other educators described themselves as politically out of step with the community and parents. One, from a New England state, pointed to the bottom line: 鈥淚 need my job so I must walk this fine line.鈥

鈥淭eaching for our lives鈥

For many educators, the question is not if the election鈥攁nd the issues it raises鈥攏eeds to be part of their curriculum; the question is how. 鈥淭he usual course of an election does not apply here,鈥 wrote a Pasadena, California, high school teacher. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been difficult for me because this is an unprecedented situation.鈥

Faced with the choice between maintaining neutrality and denouncing rhetoric that鈥檚 counter to their values, many respondents indicated they would abandon neutrality.

When the classroom is filled with brown faces, teachers told us, they felt a moral imperative to speak out. 鈥淚 am less neutral,鈥 a Jersey City, New Jersey, high school teacher volunteered. 鈥淚 want to reassure my students I don鈥檛 buy into racist rhetoric.鈥 Others echoed the need to stand as allies to their students.

Educators indicated they are focusing on staying true to the ideals and values of their schools. A Blue Hill, Maine, elementary teacher explained, 鈥淚 am more vocal. I make connections between how we are expected to treat each other at school and how the candidates treat each other and segments of the population.鈥 A Michigan teacher added, 鈥淣ormally I don鈥檛 tell students about my political opinions. This year I feel it is appropriate to say that I wouldn鈥檛 vote for someone who isn鈥檛 going to be respectful of others.鈥

A Renton, Washington, high school teacher said, 鈥淔or the first time in my career, I state bluntly what is appropriate conduct for a candidate for this country鈥檚 highest office.鈥 She spelled it out for students: 鈥淚f it can get you suspended from high school, you shouldn鈥檛 be espousing it as a candidate.鈥 Another Washington teacher wrote, 鈥淭his is probably the first time I haven鈥檛 been unbiased about it. My students need to know that some of what they are witnessing is not okay.鈥

In schools where student partisanship leans heavily to one side, educators find themselves needing to speak up for students whose political values are in the minority. 鈥淭he rhetoric has set up a school community that is hostile to conservatives and the Republican Party,鈥 a Michigan high school teacher said. 鈥淚t makes it difficult if not impossible to not take sides in my classroom because I can鈥檛 be silent in the face of this kind of rhetoric, lest I lose my students鈥 respect or trust.鈥

No one can fault an educator who stands up for values like respect, dignity and honesty鈥攙alues that have long been central to character education and anti-bullying programs. But this year has pushed some educators to go further and take risks. 鈥淚 have thrown caution into the wind and have spoken out against certain candidates which I have NEVER done,鈥 wrote a Michigan high school teacher, 鈥渂ut I feel it鈥檚 my duty to speak out against ignorance!鈥

These are high-stakes decisions. Several wrote about parents registering complaints when they raised issues of values, fact-checking and critical thinking. But, as one Indianapolis high school teacher put it, 鈥淚 am a point where I鈥檓 going to take a stand even if it costs me my position.鈥

In Washington state, one high school teacher admitted, 鈥淚 am teaching off the hook before anyone 鈥榗atches鈥 me and puts me in a Common Core box; we are reading Howard Zinn, Anne Frank, Haig Bosmajian, Jane Yolen, Ayn Rand, George Orwell and survivors鈥 testimonies from the Holocaust and the genocides around the world. 鈥 I am making it as real and as connected to my students as I can. I feel like I am teaching for our lives.鈥

High stakes for all of us

Every presidential election is important, of course. What may be most important about this election is something few pundits have talked about: its impact on the next generation of voters.

What鈥檚 at stake in 2016 is not simply who will be our 45th president or how the parties might realign, but how well we are preparing young people for their most important job: the job of being a citizen. If schools avoid the election鈥攐r fail to find ways to help students discuss it productively鈥攊t鈥檚 akin to taking civics out of the curriculum.

Public schools were established in the 19th century mainly to serve a civic mission and ensure that our system of self-government would survive. That mission continues today. Preparing students for citizenship continues to be one of the three broad goals that all sides have agreed must be the purpose of schools: college, career and citizenship.

Since the 1970s, voter participation rates have steadily declined, to the point that only 57.5 percent of eligible voters turned out for the 2012 presidential election. Will this election inspire more students to become voters when they turn 18, or will it add to the burden of voter apathy?

The good news is鈥攁ccording to the survey respondents鈥攜oung people are taking an interest in politics, more than they have in years. That message came in from across the country. In Oakland, California, middle school students 鈥済o home to watch the news with their families on their own. They ask for permission to research and blog about political candidates and speeches every day.鈥 In Massachusetts, a high school teacher says it鈥檚 the 鈥渙ne positive鈥 impact of the election on her students. 鈥淭hey WANT to know how primaries and conventions look, what limitations on a president鈥檚 power exist, and what other elections have been so outrageous,鈥 she wrote. Middle schoolers in Tampa, Florida, 鈥渁re completely immersed,鈥 says their teacher. 鈥淭hey engage in intense debate about it in and out of the classroom.鈥 And, in Pleasanton, California, another middle school teacher reports, 鈥淔or the first time in my 20 years of teaching I have a group of students who have formed a Politics Club.鈥

But what about the schools that aren鈥檛 even teaching the election this year, or where students feel disillusioned or disconnected? The survey gave ample evidence that鈥攅ven if students are more interested in this year鈥檚 campaign鈥攖his election cycle may also be diminishing their faith in electoral politics. 鈥淭he sad part is that students are losing respect for the political process and for the office of the [p]resident,鈥 said a high school teacher from East Hartford, Connecticut. 鈥淭hey see the candidates as jokes and are offended and dismayed for the future.鈥

A New York high school teacher summed up the dilemma. 鈥淭hey are increasingly political (which is good),鈥 she wrote, 鈥渂ut the extreme rhetoric being modeled is not helping their ability to utilize reason and evidence, rather than replying in kind.鈥

Learning to participate in government, even simply as an informed voter, cannot be achieved by interest alone. Preparation for the job of citizen means developing a civic disposition, like being willing to listen to multiple points of view, debate issues, support claims and work with others. Citizens must understand fundamental principles like the role of free speech and of a free press; the fact that majority rule can never undercut minority rights; and the rule of law. What makes presidential elections so compelling鈥攎ost of the time鈥攊s that they鈥檙e live, real-time case studies in civic life. While no election or candidate is a paradigm of civic virtue, and there have been some disgraceful election campaigns in our past, this one stands out for modeling the worst kind of behavior.

鈥淥ne of the things that worries me is that this is the first presidential campaign my high school students are old enough to understand,鈥 an Edmonds, Washington, teacher said. 鈥淚 hope they don鈥檛 walk away thinking this is what politics is all about.鈥

About The Survey

The discussion in this report summarizes responses to questions posed by Teaching Tolerance via an informal online survey conducted from March 23 to April 2, 2016.

A link to the survey was sent to educators who subscribe to the Teaching Tolerance newsletter and was also shared on Teaching Tolerance鈥檚 social media sites. It was open to any educator who wanted to participate. Several other groups, including Facing History and Ourselves and Teaching for Change, also shared the survey link with their social media audiences.

Respondents were asked if they agreed or disagreed with each of the following statements:

  • There has been an increase in anti-immigrant sentiment at my school since the 2016 presidential campaign began.
  • There has been an increase in anti-Muslim sentiment at my school since the 2016 presidential campaign began.
  • I have heard an increase in uncivil political discourse at my school since the 2016 presidential campaign began.
  • My students have expressed concern about what might happen to them or their families after the election.

Respondents were also able to provide free responses to these open-ended questions:

  • How have you seen the rhetoric of this year鈥檚 presidential campaign affect your students? Your school?
  • If you have witnessed bullying or biased language at your school鈥攆rom adults or students鈥攖hat mimics the rhetoric of the campaign, please tell us about it.
  • Have you changed the way you approach teaching about the election this year? If so, how?
  • What resources do you need to help you teach safely and effectively about the 2016 election?
  • Do you have additional comments?

In the course of just over a week, almost 2,000 people responded to the survey. Collectively, they submitted over 5,000 comments. Nearly all respondents identified themselves by name, email address, grade level and state.

Cover photo: AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster