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Woman outside holding a sign that says "we are the future" in front of an American flag

Immigration Justice

Supporting Immigrant Families and Students
Let’s work together to create immigration policies that are humane, functional, and just.
Published: May 12, 2023
This toolkit originally appeared on NEA.org

How to use this toolkit

  • Learn about current immigration issues and the status of DREAMers and DACA recipients.
  • Find out how your school can become a safe zone for immigrant students and communities in the face of harsh immigration enforcement.
  • Take action for fair and just immigration policies.
Viewing: Toolkit Section Title

Where we stand

More than 18 million children under age 18 have a parent born outside the United States—and nearly 40 percent of them live in households where neither parent is a U.S. citizen. Dreamers, DACA recipients, individuals with temporary protected status, and other immigrants play a vital role in our economy and everyday lives.  

Across our country, public schools are welcoming places that nurture learning and create environments that foster growth and creativity. They also serve as resource hubs, connecting families with their communities and resources. 

No matter what our immigration status is—or where we come from, what color our skin is, what language we speak, or how we worship—most of us work hard for our families and want to ensure their safety and well-being. But today, certain politicians want to distract us from their failures in governing by pointing the finger at new and undocumented immigrants and supporting overly harsh policies that harm all of us by criminalizing families for wanting safety and a better future. Instead of honoring immigrants’ courage and commitment, they endeavor to divide and distract us by generating fear based on race or place of origin.

We are joining together with people across racial differences to demand fair and safe immigration processes for all families, just like we won civil rights in our past. We can make this a place that honors all families, no exceptions. 

We support commonsense immigration reforms that include: 

  • Addressing the millions of students and young adults who were brought here as children by their parents 

  • Preserving family unity 

  • Creating a realistic, humane, and legal path to citizenship and strengthening labor protections for the aspiring citizens who call America home  

  • Ensuring that all individuals who arrive at our borders have a right to seek asylum 

  • Providing resources for mental health and migration-based trauma  

  • Fostering a welcoming environment for all children and educators, regardless of the language they speak or immigration status 

Immigration issues may seem complicated, but some things are simple. We must uphold the Constitutional right of all children in the United States to receive a K-12 education, regardless of their immigration status. We will not separate families. We must provide a trusted path to citizenship for immigrant Dreamers. We should provide resources for mental health and English language learners (ELLs). And we should achieve this through creating an immigration system that is humane, functional, and just.

Understand the Issues — and How You Can Help

activists protesting immigration policy holding a sign that says Keep Families Together

Protecting Immigrant Communities

All students should have the opportunity to learn without the fear and danger that results from harsh immigration enforcement, such as migration-based trauma. Many school districts are making their campuses “safe zones” for immigrant students and communities. You can be part of this movement.
DACAmented Educators outside the U.S. Supreme Court

Defending Dreamers

Dreamers, DACA recipients, individuals with temporary protected status, and other immigrants play a vital role in our economy and everyday lives. Learn how we are coming together to advocate for a path to citizenship for Dreamers and make this a nation that reflects the best of America’s values.
activists protesting immigration policy with sign that says Here to Stay

DACA Ruled Unlawful by the Fifth Circuit. Here's What Happens Next.

A federal appeals court struck a major blow to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, leaving thousands of recipients, including 9,000 educators, in limbo.
Alondra García
America is the only home I can remember, and yet I feel alienated and unwelcome. It’s mentally and emotionally draining to have to educate people about my situation, to get people to understand that my family is as American as any other.
Quote by: Alondra García, Wisconsin, Second Grade Bilingual Teacher
Viridiana Castro Silva
We need a path to citizenship for the 11 million undocumented immigrants already living in the U.S. This would be such a victory for all of us and would solidify years of grassroots organizing. It would also show the value and power of working as a community as well as our influence in politics—whether we have voting ability or not.
Quote by: Viridiana Castro Silva, California, Aspiring Educator

Speak Up For Students and Public Schools

When we act together and lift our voices together in unison, we can improve the lives of children.
An illustration of a girl with butterfly wings and a bullhorn. She has a speech bubble that says, "Our power is stronger than fear!

Respect, Reflect, and Protect SC Students!

Only The SCEA has toolkits to help you understand the issues and defend the civil rights of all students.
The South Carolina Education Association logo

Your Voice. Our Power. Their Future.

The SCEA is an affiliate of the largest professional association of educators in the country. As the leading advocate for the schools South Carolina students deserve, The SCEA works to promote quality public education and to support public school employees.