Clarifying next steps
Moon urged schools to carefully distinguish between actual legal requirements and potential directives that may be announced at the federal level. Executive orders, she noted, cannot override state-level nondiscrimination laws, and any federal investigation would typically include a period for compliance before funding is withdrawn.
“Our message to school districts is not to self-censor, [or] bow and comply in advance before you actually have a real, credible, legitimate legal requirement in front of you,” Moon said.
“Do not do this work for the president,” Moon said. “Continue to show up and protect our students.”
Rep. Rabb then asked Garner, whose work at West Philly-based Lift Every Voice places an emphasis on cultivating joy in students, “How do we tell the truth to our children and ensure that we continue to nourish and encourage their joy?”
“Our charges are different depending on what our position is and what our identity is. There’s just no way around that,” Garner said. “The anxiety is much different if you are far away from it enough to theorize about it, or if you’re of it and in it.”
Garner encouraged parents to answer their children’s questions honestly, but in a way that allows them to continue feeling safe — which could look different for every family. She also framed the moment as a chance to model compassion for those in different circumstances.
“There’s a reciprocal relationship between how we model the conduct that we want to see in the kids — the leaders, the people that we want to develop — and how we get nourishment from being around young people who have not been completely demoralized,” Garner said.
Calls to action
Throughout the night, panelists encouraged concerned teachers and parents to show up and testify at the School Board’s monthly action meeting on Feb. 27. Núñez shared that the district needs to be prompted.
“They don’t actually move on their own,” Núñez said, “and it’s all on us to do it.”
Landau suggested that proactive reminders to leadership can help maintain protections already on the books.
“I would also suggest that in this room we all come together and figure out ways in which we should now proactively keep reminding our leadership, including the school Superintendent and otherwise, what our expectations are,” Landau said. “Just send an email now that says, ‘Hey, thanks for doing x, y and z, our expectation is that you will keep these policies on the books and that you’ll keep enforcing it, thanks so much.’ [Don’t] wait till the crisis time … let’s just tell them now, early on.”