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How much say does a governor have over the classroom?

With legislative sessions in full swing across the nation, state lawmakers are considering a raft of bills that could change how and what students are taught.

The areas addressed by the proposed legislation include student mental health, teacher staffing, and the role of career and technical education. Other bills put issues such as gender studies, the teaching of history, and parent rights under the microscope. Proposed laws also address what can or cannot exist in school classrooms and libraries related to books. 

Why We Wrote This

As the culture wars drift further into the education realm, they’re spawning questions fundamentally tied to American democracy.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, has led the charge in making education reforms a signature aspect of his political agenda. He garnered much attention last year after signing into law legislation addressing culture war issues such as how and when race, sexuality, and gender are taught in public schools. 

So far this year, legislation has been introduced in at least 19 states that would curtail teaching related to “divisive concepts or critical race theory” in public schools or higher education institutions, according to tracking done by the National Conference of State Legislatures. 

As these policy debates play out in legislatures, two concepts are simmering under the surface: gubernatorial authority and free speech. 

With legislative sessions in full swing across the nation, state lawmakers are considering a raft of bills that could change how and what students are taught.

Some of the proposed legislation addresses student mental health, teacher staffing, and the role of career and technical education. Other bills put issues such as gender studies, the teaching of history, and parent rights under the microscope. Proposed laws concerning what can or cannot exist in school classrooms and libraries related to books have also emerged as another entry point for those seeking educational reform.

In many respects, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, has led the charge in making education reforms a signature aspect of his political agenda. He garnered much attention last year after signing into law the “Stop WOKE Act,” addressing culture war issues such as how and when race, sexuality, and gender are taught in public schools. But he’s hardly the only governor or state lawmaker proposing or supporting such changes. 

Why We Wrote This

As the culture wars drift further into the education realm, they’re spawning questions fundamentally tied to American democracy.

So far this year, legislation has been introduced in at least 19 states that would curtail teaching related to “divisive concepts or critical race theory” in public schools or higher education institutions, according to tracking done by the National Conference of State Legislatures. More than a dozen other states have already passed similar legislation or made policy changes via administrative or board action.

As these policy debates play out in legislatures, two concepts simmering under the surface are gubernatorial authority and free speech. 

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