
Students of every race and ethnicity must be valued and protected at school. It is essential that educators and administrators acknowledge and actively confront racial bias, bullying, and harassment.
Racism can take many forms, including school policies that perpetuate discrimination, targeting students of color, and practices that deny equal access to education. Students’ intersectional identities (along lines of race, gender, sexuality, and disability) can shape how students experience discrimination. Thus, reported incidents of racism don’t capture the range of injustices that students of color face in our schools.
ELC believes that all schools must follow their legal obligation to address racism and intentionally foster affirming, antiracist school environments.
Key ELC Fact Sheets and Resources
- The Right to Be Free From Racism at School
- Promising Practices to Build Antiracist and Affirming Schools
- How to File a Complaint to the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission
ELC uses multiple strategies to support antiracist, affirming schools. ELC works with local communities and school districts in Pennsylvania to counter hostile school environments, rewrite discriminatory dress codes, develop inclusive curriculum, end exclusionary discipline, and eliminate fines and fees. In 2025, a necessary, new focus is responding to attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.
Here are a few examples of our work:
Black Girls Education Justice Initiative
In ELC’s 2023 report, We Need Supportive Spaces That Celebrate Us: Black Girls Speak Out About Public Schools, we drew upon Black girls’ expertise about their school experiences to write about the pervasive inequities and anti-Black racism they encounter, and we presented their recommendations for change.
Learn more about how ELC is following up on the report through our Black Girls Education Justice Initiative. We believe schools can and must change to become supportive spaces for Black girls. We have seen that schools can change. In Philadelphia, for example, our recommendations were incorporated into district policies on dress and grooming.
Challenging Exclusionary and Subjective Discipline
For decades, scholars, advocates, and families have unequivocally expressed that harsh, often discriminatory, and sometimes permanent exclusionary school discipline results in long-term negative outcomes for young people. Overwhelmingly, students impacted by discriminatory discipline practices are Black, Brown, LGBTQ+, and/or are students with disabilities. Black girls are disproportionately excluded from school due to sexual and racial stigma and bias. Now we see a federal push to totally disregard these racial disparities in school discipline.
ELC recognizes the harmful consequences of school suspension, expulsion, transfer, and pushout and advocates for more just practices in In Pennsylvania schools, where permanent expulsions still happen. It is crucial that families, advocates, and students know their rights, and how to best advocate against harsh or unwarranted discipline. ELC supports students and families through our Helpline and provides resources like these:
- Suspensions in Pennsylvania
- Expulsions in Pennsylvania
- Suspension & Expulsion Toolkit
- Alternative Education for Disruptive Youth (AEDY)
Responding to Attacks on DEI (Diversity, Equity and Inclusion)
Recent White House executive orders represent an alarming frontal assault on all commitments to educational equity for Black and Brown students. ELC is fighting back – stepping up to respond to a series of anti-DEI executive orders and the accompanying threats to cut federal funding to school districts.
Our nation’s civil rights laws have not changed. Schools have legal obligations to provide a safe, affirming environment and equitable opportunities for all our students. The threats in the recent executive orders are unlawful, as we explained in letter to all Pennsylvania school districts about attacks on DEI, written with ACLU-PA. In April 2025 we followed up with a joint webinar, The Truth About Executive Orders and Lawful DEI in Pennsylvania Schools and Colleges. You can find a recording and additional resources here.