John Rogers of the University of California in Los Angeles has written a powerful analysis of Trump’s effect on teaching and learning. You will not be surprised to learn that the vulgarity and crudity that Trump regularly expresses towards vulnerable groups has affected the climate in schools. His hate speech has spilled over into the atmosphere. He has given license to bigotry.
Here is Valerie Strauss on the Rogers’ report.
The full title is “Teaching and Learning in the Age of Trump: Increasing Hostility and Stress in America’s High Schools.”
This is the press release:
Trump’s Heated Political Rhetoric Spills Over into Classroom,
Increasing Stress and Undermining Learning
New National Survey of Teachers by UCLA finds Heightened Stress and Anxiety, Polarization, Incivility and Hostility Among Students in First Months of Trump Administration
Amid the first months of a Trump administration characterized by highly charged and divisive political rhetoric, a new national survey of public high school teachers finds heightened levels of student stress and anxiety and concerns for their own well being or that of their family members, according to a new study published by the UCLA Institute for Democracy, Education and Access. Teachers in the survey also report a rise in polarization and incivility in classrooms, as well as an increased reliance by students on unreliable and unsubstantiated information. Teachers also report hostile environments for racial and religious minorities and other vulnerable groups.
“Hate speech and acts of intimidation are not new to U.S. Schools, but its disconcerting that numerous teachers are telling us that the level of animus they are seeing is ‘unprecedented’ in their careers, says John Rogers, a professor of education at the UCLA Graduate School of Education and the lead researcher for the study. “The harsh political environment of the first few months of the Trump administration is clearly spilling over into the classroom, increasing anxiety and undermining learning.”
The study, Teaching and Learning in the Age of Trump: Increasing Stress and Hostility in America’s High Schools, reports the results of a nationally representative survey of more than 1,500 high school teachers conducted in May 2017 examining the impact of the national political environment on students and the implications for student learning. More than 800 teachers also responded to an open-ended question regarding how their “classroom and school climate has changed this past year as a result of changes in national politics.”
More than half of teachers responding to the survey report more students are experiencing high levels of stress and anxiety than in previous years, and more than three-quarters say students are concerned about their own well being or that of family members. Immigration is the issue causing the most concern, with more than half of teachers saying students are concerned about proposals for the deportation of undocumented immigrants. These concerns are significantly higher in schools serving predominately students of color.
Teachers also report heightened polarization on campus and incivility in their classrooms. One teacher said, “In my seventeen years I have never seen anger this blatant and raw over a political candidate or issue.” More than 40 percent of teachers also report that students were more likely than in previous years to introduce unfounded claims from unreliable sources, with many linking the use of unsubstantiated sources and growing incivility.
Teachers also say that a growing number of schools, particularly predominantly White schools, became hostile environments for racial and religious minorities and other vulnerable groups. More than one quarter of teachers reported an increase in students making derogatory remarks about other groups during class discussions. Teachers responding to the survey described how the political environment “unleashed” virulently racist, anti-Islamic, anti-Semitic, or homophobic rhetoric in their schools and classrooms.
“Many teachers are telling us that students seem to be ‘emboldened’ to use harsh racist and bigoted rhetoric,” says Rogers. “They cite examples of students being targeted for the color of their skin, their Muslim faith, or sexual orientation, while others tell stories of students openly embracing racism and white supremacy, and confronting classmates in threatening ways. These acts are taking a toll on young people and undermining student learning.”
Teachers also say that the stresses in the school environment are impacting student learning. 40 percent of teachers reported that students’ concerns over one or more hot-button policy issues including immigration, travel bans with Muslim countries, restrictions on LGBTQ rights, healthcare and the environment impacted students’ learning in terms of their ability to focus on lessons and their attendance.
It is important to note that teachers also have felt heightened stress in the first months of the Trump administration. More than two-thirds (67.7%) of U.S. public high school teachers reported that the level of stress associated with their work increased during the 2016-17 school year.
Teachers responding to the survey want more help to support civil exchange among students and greater understanding across differences. They also believe that leadership matters in cultivating positive school culture and student learning. But just 40 percent of teachers report that school leaders are issuing public statements confronting the problems and just over one quarter say leaders are providing guidance and support. Teachers in schools serving predominately students of color were substantially more likely than teachers in schools with predominately white students to say leaders were speaking out publically or acting to provide teachers with guidance or support.
“Unfortunately, the schools facing the greatest need for leadership to respond to the changing political climate were the least likely to experience it,” says Rogers.
Teachers also strongly support the need for political leaders to address the underlying causes of much campus incivility and stress – the contentious political rhetoric and policies that threaten student well being. More than 90% of teachers agreed that national, state, and local leaders should encourage and model civil exchange and greater understanding across lines of difference.
“In these tense political times, these findings from America’s teachers have important implication for our nation and its schools,” concludes Rogers. “The growing polarization and contentiousness in classrooms and schools undercuts the democratic purposes of public education. Public schooling emerged in the United States as a strategy for developing the civic commitments and skills of each new generation. Ideally, public schools provide opportunities for students to deliberate productively across lines of difference and practice working together to solve collective problems. The heightened level of incivility makes it more difficult for schools to achieve this valued goal.
A complete version of Teaching and Learning in the Age of Trump: Increasing Stress and Hostility in America’s High Schools is available online at: https://idea.gseis.ucla.edu/publications/teaching-and-learning-in-age-of-trump
The study is a project of the UCLA’s Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access at the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. The study draws on the results of a nationally representative survey conducted in May 2017 of 1,535 social studies, English, and mathematics teachers working in 333 geographically and demographically representative public high schools in the United States. The study also draws on extended interviews with 35 teachers from across the United States who participated in the survey.
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Summary of key findings
Stress and concerns with welfare have increased, particularly in schools enrolling few White students.
• More than half (51.4) of teachers reported more students experiencing “high levels of stress and anxiety” than in previous years.
• More than three-quarters (79%) of teachers reported students expressed concerns for their well-being or the well-being of their families in relation to one or more hot-button issues including immigration, travel limitations on predominantly Muslim countries, restrictions on LGBTQ rights, changes to health care, or threats to the environment.
• The policy issue prompting most concern among students was immigration. More than half (58%) of teachers reported some students had expressed concerns about proposals for deporting undocumented immigrants.
• Teachers in schools serving predominately students of color were almost six times more likely (53.8% to 9.1%) than teachers in predominately white schools to report that at least 10% of their students had expressed these concerns.
• 44.3% of teachers reported students’ concerns about well being in relation to one or more hot-button policy issues impacted students’ learning—their ability to focus on lessons and their attendance.
Polarization, incivility, and reliance on unsubstantiated sources have risen, particularly in predominantly White schools.
• More than 20% of teachers reported heightened polarization on campus and incivility in their classrooms.
• 41.0% of teachers reported that students were more likely than in previous years to introduce unfounded claims from unreliable sources. Many teachers noted a connection between students’ use of unsubstantiated sources and growing incivility.
A growing number of schools, particularly predominantly White schools, became hostile environments for racial and religious minorities and other vulnerable groups.
• 27.7% of teachers reported an increase in students making derogatory remarks about other groups during class discussions. Many teachers described how the political environment “unleashed” virulently racist, anti-Islamic, anti-Semitic, or homophobic rhetoric in their schools and classrooms.
School leadership matters.
More than 40 percent of teachers reported that their school leadership made public statements this year about the value of civil exchange and understanding across lines of difference. But beyond the “public statements” only 26.8% of school leaders actually provided guidance and support on these issues, as reported by teachers in the survey. Teachers in predominantly White schools were much less likely than their peers to report that their school leaders had taken these actions.
72.3% of teachers surveyed agreed that: “My school leadership should provide more guidance, support, and professional development opportunities on how to promote civil exchange and greater understanding across lines of difference.”
Teachers strongly supported the need for political leaders to address the underlying causes of much campus incivility and stress – contentious political rhetoric and policies that threaten student well being.
• More than 90% of teachers agreed “national, state, and local leaders should encourage and model civil exchange and greater understanding across lines of difference.”
• Almost as many (83.9%) agreed that national and state leaders should “work to alleviate the underlying factors that create stress and anxiety for young people and their families.”

Cross posted at https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/John-Rogers-Teaching-and-in-Life_Arts-Charged_Democracy_Diane-Ravitch_Hate-Speech-171030-628.html
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Kevin P. Chavous Named K12 Inc. President of Academics, Policy, and Schools
Published: October 26, 2017
Education Reform Innovator Joins the K12 Managed Schools Leadership Team
HERNDON, Va.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Oct. 26, 2017– K12 Inc., a technology-based education company and leading provider of proprietary curriculum and online school programs for students in pre-K through high school, is pleased to announce that national education reform advocate Kevin P. Chavous has been named the company’s President of Academics, Policy, and Schools.
The founder of Democrats for Education Reform and as a founding board member of the American Federation for Children taking a job to sell ed tech to public schools.
So- is Mr. Chavous “self interested” or does that only apply to public school supporters?
I hope public schools don’t fall for another ed reform sales job- we’ll regret sinking a bundle into ed tech, especially K12 Inc, which is cheap garbage they only foist on low income kids.
http://markets.on.nytimes.com/research/stocks/news/press_release.asp?docTag=201710261700BIZWIRE_USPRX____BW6505&feedID=600&press_symbol=9634704
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I think we have been pretending in this country for an awful long time. Trump is the symptom not the cause . What the solution is I do not claim to know. Tolerance of the intolerable is certainly not where Americas teachers should be going . What kind of civil exchange is there about hate and demagoguery. It is not a lack of civil exchange that elected Trump . Perhaps some dishonesty may have contributed, but part of that dishonesty is the thought that we can have civil exchange about racism or oligarchy.
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I know my teacher ed program tried to indoctrinate me into PC doctrine. My thoughts didn’t need much “correction” –I’m a liberal –but I wonder if this indoctrination had any impact on the conservative teachers-in-training, or did it just drive their opinions underground? I suspect teachers and kids see through the propaganda and tune it out. It seems to me that a more effective attack on racism and hate would entail a deeper, more sophisticated approach.
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I am afraid on a number of levels we are on the edge of fascism. What type of sophisticated approach is there to that . It was one thing for the Goebbels News network to exist when they were outside the seat of power. Quite another when Goebbels news and their allies control all three branches of government and the plutocracy. We are not talking about liberal or conservative ideas . I disliked most Republicans for their philosophy . I have felt for sometime that Government was not acting in the interests of the governed . Never before did I fear that an imperfect Democracy itself was in jeopardy.
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A good read on tolerance is Ch.13 “Tolerance” in Andre Comte-Sponville’s “A Small Treatise on the Great Virtues”.
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I have seen an uptick in anti-Semitic, Islamophobic and anti-Mexican remarks at my predominantly white school. One of my Trump-supporting students told me that Trump’s election means “we can say what we’ve always thought but never said before”. I think the hate silos on the Internet have probably also loosened people’s inhibitions about uttering taboo opinions.
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what is a “hate silo”?
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Some p.c. thought should remain underground. I don’t want to legitimize racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic speech.
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I agree that some non-PC speech should be taboo. But I wonder if the enforcers of PC have tried to expand the realm of taboo too far, and that we’re reaping the backlash.
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Ponderosa,
If PC means you can’t insult people because of their race, gender, ethnicity, or sexual identity makes you PC, then I support PC. You can’t have a decent society if people feel free to insult others and call them names. That’s rude and uncivil.
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Diane, I’m talking about the PC codes that, for example, brand one a racist for even questioning the “school-to-prison pipeline” concept –i.e. the idea that teachers’ racial insensitivity is leading to “over discipline” of minority kids, and that this induces otherwise rule-abiding kids to transform into rule-breakers, and sets them up for arrest after graduation. This is false, false, false and yet it’s settled doctrine among the self-appointed arbiters-of-PC. Campaigning locally for a big liberal group, I read in their literature that local schools are “failing” because of “lack of diversity in the teaching force” –in other words, white teachers are the root of black kids’ woes. This is lunacy, but it’s part of the insane PC dogma these days. This is just one example of PC overreach into cloud-cuckoo-land (an allusion to “The Clouds”).
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Racism, sexism, islamophobia, religious bigotry, homophobia, etc. all pre-date this current president.
I am personally disgusted by the current level of vitriol and crud, that is being propagated. I feel ashamed.
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You should be ashamed of the Moron.
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Trump is not the first president who merits shame. I also remember Nixon. As to the current state of political discourse, there is enough blame to go around for many people. I fear this type of political discourse, will cause even more people to give up on politics, and the rate of participation in our elections will continue to decrease. We have a gubernatorial election here in VA next week. I predict that turnout will be very low.
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Nixon subverted democracy. So did Reagan. Trump is following in their footsteps, though he has taken it to a whole new level.
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Don’t forget to add into the equation increased screen time, exploding social media negativity on all fronts, the loss of privacy and other basic rights, increased test pressures, the instabilities created by school “choice”, and most importantly, the huge and increasing divide between the haves and have nots. Their parents can’t afford the rent. Their parents have to work 60 hour weeks to stay employed. Their parents’ unions are decimated, making any job security an impossibility. This is the 21st century gig economy. It’s increasing poverty and overwork, and blaming everyone except those who deserve the blame, the billionaires.
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USA Today and other media outlets report this:
“126 million people — or one-third the U.S. population — may have seen material posted by a Russian troll farm under fake Facebook identities between 2015 and 2017…Previously Facebook said 10 million people saw Russia-linked advertising that sought to sway U.S. voters….Twitter, which originally said it found 201 accounts linked to Russia that were sending out automated, election-related content, also increased its estimates of the reach these operatives had on its platform. It has now found 36,746 such accounts… 29 million people got content from the Russian troll farm known as the Internet Research Agency and shared it in their Facebook News Feeds.”
I know of a school division billed by its “leaders” as “cutting edge” and “innovative.” A wealthy locality, it routinely short shrifts teacher salaries by grouping itself with poorer and much poorer school districts in order to determine teacher pay. It throws millions of dollars recklessly at technology, recently issuing all students tablets. The superintendent is a Twitter addict who has tossed out more than 100,000 tweets. The superintendent turned all of the high schools into STEM academies, but cannot site a single piece of research to buttress the move. The school board gloms on to all of it.
Meanwhile, Trump and his supporters are doing anything and everything to try and distract from the new indictments, with Trump even trying to claim that it was Hillary Clinton who colluded with the Russians. Yeah, Clinton colluded with Russian intelligence agencies to produce and disseminate slews of fake news that denigrated her and promoted Trump – all designed to deceive voters – so she would purposefully lose a close election.
Trump and the Republican party are now the official face of white nationalism and Mother Russia.
Over at The Post, Jay Mathews is still slobbering over Advanced Placement as the means by which American public education will be transformed and improved.
I’m still convinced that the a renewed commitment to democratic values and principle, and to democratic citizenship – what Aristotle called the “character of democracy” – is the best way to revitalize public schooling and to restore the Republic.
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