Lately, Florida Governor and Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis has significantly curtailed his use of the term āwoke.ā Whereas just a few months ago he said the word seven times in 26 seconds in a speech, he avoided it completely during the first primary debate.
DeSantisās rhetorical retreat is likely due to recent polling showing that his once-declared āwar on wokeā is yielding diminishing electoral returns. But anyone hoping that this political shift would be accompanied by a policy shift will be disappointed. His authoritarian, white supremacist attacks on Floridaās public education system have continued apace.
DeSantis has enacted multiple āeducational gag ordersā that criminalize classroom discussions of race, gender identity, and ugly historical realities that might make white students āfeel guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress.ā Florida teachers, whose salaries rank 48th in the country, have seen their jobs become only more thankless. The end result is an exodus of teachers, and what Florida Education Association (FEA) head Andrew Spar has called āone of the worst teacher and staff shortagesā in the stateās history. āThe policies, vilification, and low pay are certainly all factors,ā Spar told me. āI was shocked, going around the state and talking to teachers as we were starting the school year, hearing over and over again, āIām getting out of education in general because, as much as I love working with and teaching kids, Iām really not able to do that. I just want to be able to teach.āā
Sparās anecdotal experiences are borne out by statistics. In January 2019, when DeSantis was sworn into his first term as governor, there were 2,217 teacher vacancies in the stateās K-12 public schools. As he entered his second term in January 2023, that number had ballooned to 5,294, according to the FEA. This August, the FEA found the number of unfilled positions neared a staggering 7,000.
DeSantisās education policies not only ban free speech in the classroom but encourage increased curriculum surveillance through what PEN America calls āeducational intimidation billsā that empower DeSantisās conservative allies to monitor and punish educators who step out of line. For example, HB 1467, signed by DeSantis in 2022, requires that every public elementary schoolās website provide āa list of all materials maintained in the school libraryā and invites not just parents, but any āresident of the county,ā to file an objection. While the law neglects to mention specific penalties, it makes passing reference to Florida statute 847.012, a preexisting law classifying the dissemination of sexually obscene material to minors as a felony. The confusion has led at least one county to err on the side of caution by restricting in-class discussions of ShakespeareāShakespeare!āto excerpts that steer clear of racy sexual content.
āTeachers donāt know what to say, or what not to say, and so theyāre opting to not say anything, not only because of fear of getting fired but of potentially getting arrested and being charged if they happen to violate this law,ā Nikki Fried, chair of the Florida Democratic Party, told me.
In the realm of higher education, DeSantisās takeover of the state university systemās honors college, New College, has seen him install six political cronies to its board of trustees, among them right-wing provocateur Christopher Rufo. The partisan board fired the collegeās president, appointed a DeSantis ally in her place, voted to end the gender studies program, signaled the sunsetting of tenure, and aggressively recruited male students to undo what right-wingers call the āfeminizationā of American colleges. The board takeover also drove 40 percent of the faculty to quit and a slew of classes to be canceled just days before the school year started.
āDeSantis isnāt choosing people who are qualified to be presidents of universities and collegesāheās putting in people for the sole purpose of changing the philosophies of the teaching,ā Fried told me. āWe have multiple high-ranking leadership positions open at the University of Florida, and I donāt know who theyāre going to fill them withābecause if you care about academia, youāre not coming to the University of Florida right now.ā
Itās not just educators who are recoiling. This March, an Intelligent.com survey found that 91 perĀcent of college-bound Florida high school students ādisagree with DeSantisās policies,ā along with 79 perĀcent of currently enrolled college students in the state. Nearly 13 percent of graduating high school seniors cited DeSantisās āeducation policiesā as the reason they wonāt attend a Florida state college. Among those who plan to enroll in a Florida state school, 78 percent are concerned that DeSantisās āpolicies will have a negative impact on their education.ā And one out of 20 state college students said they āplan to transfer because of DeSantisā education policies.ā As of early August, at least two dozen of New Collegeās 700 students had taken up Massachusetts-based Hampshire College on its offer to accept any New College defectors at the same tuition.
DeSantis has shrugged off any suggestions of an impending educational brain drain. Of the New College faculty departures, he said, āIf youāre a professor in, like, you know, Marxist studies, thatās not a loss for Florida.ā After signing a bill that defunded diversity programs in the stateās colleges, he suggested that students who disagree should āgo to Berkeley.ā And at the first Republican primary debate, the self-proclaimed āEducation Governorā suggested heād take the war on public schools national, stating, āWe need education in this country, not indoctrination in this country.ā
āRon DeSantis is undermining all the work that was done in these last 20 years to make Florida a destination for education,ā Fried told me. āHeāll be gone by the time that thereās real repercussions to his actions. But they will have a ripple impact on higher education in Florida for generations to come.ā
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