Political incivility, racial hostility
roil U.S. high schools, study finds
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[March 13, 2019]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - Political grudges and racial
animosity have divided students at U.S. high schools and President
Donald Trump has exacerbated the problem with his rhetoric, a study
released on Wednesday showed.
Researchers at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
surveyed 505 high school principals for the study. More than 60 percent
of them reported some of their students had made derogatory remarks
about immigrants.
More broadly, more than 80 percent of principals said some of their
students had disparaged other ethnic groups.
The UCLA study is called "School and Society in the Age of Trump," but
its author said the Republican president is not solely responsible for
tensions at secondary schools.
"The report is a story of this particular time, not narrowly a story of
the actions of this one president, although this president's actions
contribute to it," John Rogers, a professor of education at UCLA, said
by phone.
A White House representative declined to comment.
The UCLA report described a charged environment at high schools, with
most principals having to deal with students who make hateful or hostile
remarks about other people's ethnic background or political beliefs.
Groups of white students at some schools have chanted "Build the wall!"
to demean students of color, according to accounts from several
principals to researchers.
RISE IN HATE CRIMES
Those and other instances of racial hostility at high schools bear a
resemblance to Trump's rhetoric on immigration, the study said.
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President Donald Trump talks to reporters as he departs to visit
storm-hit areas of Alabama from the White House in Washington, U.S.,
March 8, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
To bolster their contention that some hostility at schools is due to
Trump's positions, the study points to a 17 percent rise in hate
crimes across American society in 2017, the first year of Trump's
presidency.
Some conservative students have also encountered venom from
classmates.
Nearly half of principals told their students to respect students
with unpopular political views, and one third emphasized the
importance of tolerating the views of conservatives.
In Wisconsin, one principal reported a small group of his students
arrived at school one day wearing Trump's signature "Make America
Great Again" hats, which offended some liberal teenagers and led to
a fistfight.
In another episode, some students in Connecticut made demeaning
comments to a white student after she showed support for Trump, a
principal told researchers, and the pupil felt her teacher did not
defend her right to express herself.
The report also found high schools are affected by other social
problems, such as opioid addiction and firearms violence.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill
Tarrant)
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