Of all the disastrous consequences of the 10-20 million illegal border crossings over the past four years, one of the most overlooked – and perhaps most damaging long-term – is the impact on the American education system.
According to a shocking new report from researchers at Syracuse University, American K-12 schools have been burdened with at least 500,000 school-age migrant children since 2022 alone. Nearly all of these children speak no English and are crammed into already overcrowded classrooms which do not have the resources to handle the influx.
A 1982 Supreme Court ruling, Plyler v. Doe, requires that public schools educate all resident children regardless of immigration status. The Federation for American Immigration Reform estimates that this costs taxpayers about $80.5 billion per year.
In New York City, where per-pupil costs have ballooned to $38,000, the district was forced to take in 21,000 new migrant students last year – adding $800 million to the taxpayers’ bill.
The Syracuse report delved into the situation in school districts across 23 states, stretching from Texas to Alaska. It spans densely-populated urban districts to the quaint Hot Springs Elementary in rural California, which boasts just 16 pupils, shedding new light on the immense challenges teachers are grappling with – a harsh reality that has so far been severely underreported.
The researchers reached out to districts between August and late September, just as classes were starting again this fall. Many educators and parents reported “inflamed social tensions” as American students are forced to compete with migrant children, many of whom were brought here illegally, for taxpayer-funded resources. Teachers say they are struggling to navigate disparate cultural norms with students who do not speak English. One-third of districts in the survey said the growing number of migrant children had a “significant” impact on their ability to provide a quality education.
Denver Public Schools Superintendent Alex Marrero, quoted in the report, described the pressure that the increase in students exerted on his schools as “tremendous.” The report also documents the desperation many teachers have felt, with one instructor saying she was forced to use a translator app on her phone to communicate with her students.
17 districts in the survey had requested additional funding from the government to deal with the migrant influx. Of the 12 that received any money, all said it was not sufficient to hire the needed number of ESL (English as a Second Language) teachers.
The city school district in Springfield, Ohio – recently in the headlines for the problems created by a flood of 20,000 Haitian migrants to this community of 60,000 – said that schools were in desperate need of textbooks in Creole, the French dialect spoken in Haiti, and Spanish.
Charleroi, Pennsylvania, another small community south of Pittsburgh, has also become a flashpoint for the migrant surge. The number of non-English speaking students in that district has exploded from just 12 in the 2021-2022 school year to 220 this year. About 80 percent of those students are Haitian.
As a result, the district has hired five new staff members at a cost to taxpayers of about $400,000 per year.
Many American families are now choosing to leave the public school system entirely given the new challenges. Charleroi Superintendent Ed Zelich revealed that at least 37 students had instead enrolled in a local charter school, with parents saying that their kids were falling behind because teachers were spending so much time trying to communicate with non-English speaking students.
The Denver, Colorado, public school district has seen an even more dramatic increase. During the 2022-2023 school year, 4,763 migrant children enrolled in the district. That number is expected to be even higher this school year.
For students in inner city schools, where most of the migrant arrivals are concentrated, this sudden surge of new students has been particularly devastating. In the Baltimore City School District, 23 schools had zero students who tested as proficient in math in 2023, while just 15 percent of students in the entire district tested as proficient in reading. Yet Maryland has by far the highest rate of migrant children per capita, burdening schools that are already failing American children.
To gain some perspective on this problem, I spoke with retired Spanish business professor Juan Antonio Pelaez, who helped develop a European Community response to a wave of migration from Central Europe after the fall of the Soviet Union. As he explained, sound immigration policy should prioritize factors like whether prospective immigrants speak the language of the country they are coming to. Countries should also employ strict quota systems to avoid overwhelming schools and local government services.
“Back then, we were overly cautious, dreading the possibility of a massive influx created by mismanagement,” Pelaez said. “The outcome we feared is now evident in America.”
Retired law professor Gregorio Bencivenni, who worked with Pelaez, said that his focus was “avoiding conditions that created an obligation on the state which could not be met.” As German Chancellor Helmut Kohl once said, “the West has limits.”
Educating the next generation is a critical component in building a stable and strong society. By every indication, the uncontrolled flow of migrants into the United States over the past four years has made that mission exponentially more difficult – a consequence that the country will now be dealing with for decades to come.
Ben Solis is the pen name of an international affairs journalist, historian, and researcher.
Yet teachers continue to vote overwhelmingly for candidates and the party that perpetuated this hoax upon their classrooms and their community. Why? Because they are told to by their unions. Why? Because the democrat socialist party sees a big pay day in this at taxpayer expense.
I have three children -all college degrees and one with masters. O can assure you that if they were again young, school age, I would either do private or home school. It is a mess for public schools!
Most schools are funded by property taxes, among other revenue streams. We are already at the bottom of the education ratings as a country, even though we spend more per student than almost any other country. If property owners revolted this would STOP! My area with a very small school district in OR just passed (third time they tried) a bon for $8 MILLION to build…one gymnasium. And I will be paying for this for many. many years, even though I don’t have kids or grandkids. People need to STOP being sheeple and pay attention to where their tax money goes-all of it!
Deport illegals. Problem solved.
Open borders are ruining everything in this country, not just education. Look at the crimes these evil illegal immigrant gangs are committing!! How many of us have they killed now? I watched Trump’s rally in Aurora, CO today and he actually showed the videos of the Venezuelan gang members who overtook 3 apartment buildings in that city, terrorizing, injuring and killing one person. He debased the governor of Co. and the crowd went wild and waved their Trump signs. He really took it to CO and Harris for allowing these thugs to come here and terrorize our citizens. Everyone who subscribes to AMAC must get out and take their friends and neighbors to the polls and educate them on what the evil Dems are doing to our country!! We MUST elect Trump and Vance!!
In this country, we do business in English. If you want to engage, you need to speak English. In order to engage successfully, you need an education. We should instruct foreigners before you can get an education, you need to be schooled in English. This should a requirement before you are allowed into our education system. Then you won’t be a burden. I believe other countries do the same.
Careful! They’ll indict you for “misinformation” because that will be their next step to “save democracy”.
Only mentally incapacitated could not foresee it.. Not only schools, but doctors, hospitals and other facilities, housing . They ran for reelection, people are voting for them. There is nothing absolutely nothing that can be said. There are no words. It will be a bumpy ride so bumpy, even those looking forward to just and better society will be jolted to reality.
I retired from public education in June 2020, about the time the illegal wave began to crash into the shores of S Texas, where I taught. That was also the beginning of the remote teach phenomenon. The teachers I left behind in that high-performing school really envied me.
I agree with the writer of this article. We are not capable of handling more illegal aliens!
Dems seeded this in the 50s to date
Covid school closings and marxist indoctrination didn’t do enough harm to our children. Now this.
All illegals must go for the benefit of real Americans. No exceptions.
Solutions are going to be hard to develop. Schools are going to have to think about how they are organized. Having an aide in each classroom who speaks Spanish, or instance, (or the prevailing language cluster) could be of assistance in translating instructions to students. (Aides are less expensive than teachers.)
Another thought comes from taking relatives on a trip to the Capitol yesterday They have headsets that immediately translate what the tour leader is saying into another language — the ones most often spoken by visitors, but quite a few. It certainly would be an investment, but worth it. I’m sure there are other programs/tech that serve such a purpose, for instance speaking into Google translate and projecting the translation onto a white board. The surge of students is destructive to the already struggling school districts, but state laws demand they be educated and schools are going to have to come up with some very innovative solutions to weather this hurricane.
Schools may also want to expand into unused office space and have academics for teaching English before students actually enter the system. It would also enable educators to decide a what level these students should be placed in classrooms. There is much unoccupied office space,some in low rise adaptable buildings. Thinking outside the box has to be taken seriously.