Texas School Board Doubles Down on Hair Policy That Pushed Two Black Male Students Out of School

A Houston-area school district has unanimously voted to preserve a hair policy that has been widely criticized as racist and discriminatory, especially after it prevented a Black high school senior from walking in his own graduation earlier this year. Suggested Reading DDG Scores This Rare Win in Custody Battle With Halle Bailey Highlights From Pharrell…

A Houston-area school district has unanimously voted to preserve a hair policy that has been widely criticized as racist and discriminatory, especially after it prevented a Black high school senior from walking in his own graduation earlier this year.

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The Barbers Hill Independent School District, located east of Houston, bans boys enrolled in its schools from wearing their hair long. In January, Barbers Hill High School student Deโ€™Andre Arnold made national headlines after he was told he couldnโ€™t attend senior prom or walk in his high school graduation unless he cut off his dreadlocks.

After Arnoldโ€™s story went viral, he appeared on Ellen DeGeneresโ€™ talk show and was invited to attend this yearโ€™s Academy Awards ceremony by the creators of the Oscar-winning animated short, Hair Love.

The rule also impacted his cousin, Kaden Bradford, who was suspended for wearing his hair in dreadlocks.

As NPR reports, despite a wave of states overturning these policies because of the ways they disproportionately punish Black students and workers, Barbers Hill ISD school board voted to keep the policy in place.

Naturally, an attorney for Barbers Hill ISD said the policy had nothing to do with race but was primarily concerned with maintaining โ€œexcellence.โ€

From NPR:

โ€œThey want the standards without having to meet the standards,โ€ attorney Hans Graff said, as reported by Houston Public Media. โ€œThey want to be treated differently. Theyโ€™re saying, โ€˜We want the academic excellence, we want the excellence of Barbers Hill. But we donโ€™t want to comply with what it takes to achieve that.โ€™ โ€œ

But that argument itself was โ€œracist and incredibly problematic,โ€ [ACLU Texas Attorney Brian] Klosterboer told NPR. The school district was essentially saying that โ€œthe only way to be excellent is to fit that white majority stereotype,โ€ he said. โ€œ[The studentsโ€™] heritage, too, is excellent, just as the majority culture in the district itself.โ€

According to the districtโ€™s student handbook, male students are in violation of school police if they keep their hair โ€œbelow the top of a t-shirt collar, below the eyebrows, or below the ear lobes.โ€ Arnold, who attended Barbers Hill schools since kindergarten, had complied with the policy by wearing his dreadlocks up. But Arnoldโ€™s family attorneys say school officials made the policy more restrictive last year, requiring students to meet the guidelines even when their hair wasnโ€™t worn down.

Arnold and Bradfordโ€™s families sued the school district earlier this year, faulting the policy for โ€œprofiling, singling out, and burdening Black children for wearing their hair in its natural state.โ€

โ€œAnyone whoโ€™s met Kaden and Deโ€™Andre, these students, knows how incredibly excellent they are,โ€ Klosterboer told NPR. โ€œThey have now sacrificed being away from their friendsโ€”being isolated at schoolโ€”to stand up for their constitutional rights, and to stand up for their heritage, their family and their culture and for what they believe. And that is excellent.โ€

Straight From The Root

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