Report

No student should ever be punished for being who they are. Our new report shows that more than half of Texas public schools have dress code policies that shame and penalize students for simply showing up in the classroom as their authentic selves. 

Read the Report

We reviewed the 2022-2023 dress codes of 1,178 of Texas’ 1,207 K-12 public school districts and found that:

  • 53% of surveyed districts force students to follow dress codes rooted in outdated gender norms and stereotypes, including boys-only hair length rules and other rules that only apply to girls.
     
  • Over 7% of 2022-2023 dress codes ban race-based hair textures and styles, which are now explicitly protected by the CROWN Act for the 2023-2024 school year.
     

  • More than 80% of surveyed districts have vague hair policies that may be used to disproportionately punish Black students. 
     
  • More than 80% of surveyed districts prohibit head-coverings, many without naming religious and cultural exemptions, further alienating students of certain religious and cultural backgrounds and putting the responsibility on their guardians to petition districts for permission.  
     
  • Almost 80% of surveyed districts have rules prohibiting worn, frayed, or mis-sized clothing, which disproportionately affect low-income students who may not have access to new or fitted clothing.

Our schools should be places where students feel free to express themselves and be celebrated for who they are. 
 

No student should be punished for being who they are

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Texas schools can do better

Our report outlines specific ways that schools can foster a safe environment that welcomes all students.


Texas schools must update policies to:

  • Remove discriminatory language
  • Focus on inclusivity and equity
  • Incorporate community involvement and regular review
  • Create clear and specific guidelines
  • Center respect for student expression
  • Ensure fair and non-disruptive enforcement
  • Engage in data collection and review
  • Provide sensitivity training
  • Maintain dress code consistency

Read the Report

 

Graphic that reads share your story in bold white text on top of a blue and green wavy background pattern.

If you grew up attending Texas schools, we want to learn from you.


Tell us about your experience with Texas public school dress codes. Or, with their permission, tell us how dress or grooming codes have affected a Texas student in your care.

Sharing our stories is a powerful way that we can bring awareness to the scope of this issue — and advocate for our schools to update their outdated policies.

SHARE YOUR STORY

 

take action

If your school’s dress code is discriminatory and unfair, it may be worth challenging.


Our report has resources to help you do just that, including:

  • Talking points on how to advocate against discriminatory dress codes (pages 56-57)

  • A template advocacy letter to send to your school district (page 58)

  • Step-by-step guidelines on how to file a school grievance or complaint with the government (pages 59-61)

Read the Report


Additionally, our Students’ Rights Hub has resources for you to: 

Visit the Hub


read the report

Date

Thursday, February 1, 2024 - 11:00am

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In Texas border communities, Border Patrol agents are everywhere: schools, hospitals, grocery stores, and other public spaces. Between September 2021 and May 2022, the ACLU of Texas interviewed 152 people living in the Rio Grande Valley.

We found that Border Patrol’s indiscriminate harassment and baseless traffic stops make our border feel less safe for citizens, green card holders, and undocumented residents alike.

Read the full report in English or Spanish.


Lead Communications Strategist Matt Levin contributed to this report. Former ACLU of Texas border and immigrants' rights team members Norma Herrera, Shaw Drake, Lorena Soto, Carla Aldrete Fiscal, and Emily London also contributed to this report.


 

Date

Tuesday, February 21, 2023 - 11:00am

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Maria Cordero
Bernardo Rafael Cruz — Staff Attorney

Dallas is at a defining moment. George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police officers sparked a national reckoning with policing and police violence targeting Black people. In Dallas, there is a long legacy of police violence that has resulted in the killings of Clinton Allen, Genevive Dawes, Botham Jean, and Allen Simpson. Throughout the summer, thousands of people took to the streets of Dallas to demand fundamental changes in policing. 

This report documents the ongoing practice of discriminatory policing in Dallas. Black people make up only 24% of the City of Dallas population, but 37% of traffic stops, 49% of all arrests, 63% of marijuana possession arrests, and 53% of people killed by the Dallas Police Department. Black people in Dallas are suffering disproportionately at the hands of police.

The underlying problem with policing is not just a lack of training and procedures or a problem with “bad apples” — it is the broadening of the scope and responsibilities of police, enabled by expanding budgets, that has spurred street-level harassment of communities of color, fueled mass incarceration, and led to the unlawful use of excessive force and killing of Black people. Around the country and across the state, cities are taking action to fundamentally reimagine the role of police in communities. They are disbanding problematic units, allocating funding for non-police public health and safety initiatives, and reducing police budgets.

This report urges Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson and the Dallas City Council to be bold. We are asking them to reimagine public safety by shifting 37% of the proposed Dallas Police Department budget for the upcoming fiscal year — $200 million — into non-police public health and safety initiatives. This report also includes recommendations to: (1) further restrict when and how officers can use deadly force; (2) limit discretionary arrests for citation-eligible offenses; (3) enforce a range of non- serious offenses through alternatives to policing; and (4) strengthen community police oversight.

Date

Thursday, September 10, 2020 - 1:45pm

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