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America’s Undocumented Educators Unsure of What’s Next Under Trump

There are 15,000 immigrant educators who rely on temporary permission to live and work in the U.S. But they fear for their futures under Trump.

Ang茅lica Reyes poses for a portrait in East Los Angeles on February 9, 2025. (Zaydee Sanchez/The 19th)

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was originally reported by Nadra Nittle of .

LOS ANGELES 鈥 Scattered among the shrubs on the southern border lie belongings migrants left behind 鈥 toothbrushes, water bottles, baseball caps. Some of the owners forged north, crossing the boundary undetected. Others were apprehended or succumbed to dehydration, drowning or one of the unimaginable dangers in the harsh desert that straddles Mexico and the United States.

Ang茅lica Reyes survived. At nine months old, she made the journey that could have claimed her life just as it started.

Since 1994, in the borderlands. That year, the (NAFTA) took effect. Designed to open trade between the United States, Canada and Mexico, the now-defunct policy has faced criticism for depressing Mexican wages. Their income flatlining, Reyes said, her parents left the city of Guadalajara, in the western part of Mexico, and headed with her to Los Angeles. They did not have authorization to live in the United States.

Reyes is now 32, though she remembers knowing she was undocumented as early as first grade.

鈥淢y mom was very cognizant of the discrimination and the obstacles that I would face聽throughout my life,鈥 she said. 鈥淪he made it clear, like, 鈥榊ou can’t mess up. You need to be twice as good to get half of the respect. You need to really prove that you earned your spot.鈥欌

To do that, Reyes earned the good grades that set her up to become a history teacher for the Los Angeles Unified School District. She is one of about 鈥 and among the undocumented people 鈥 who have received temporary permission to live, work and study in the United States through an Obama-era program known as . Women represent , whose future in this country has been under threat by legal challenges to the program鈥檚 existence and the anti-immigration agenda of President Donald Trump.

If DACA ends, the goal of ongoing litigation,聽 including teachers and teacher aides, would lose their jobs each month for two years as their work permits are revoked, according to FWD.us, an immigration reform organization. In California, the state with the most DACA recipients, 200 educators would lose their jobs monthly. In Texas, 100 would.

DACA-recipient teachers relate firsthand to the estimated , who confide in them about their experiences in immigrant families. They show youth that regardless of legal status, it鈥檚 possible to attain one鈥檚 professional goals. Many of these teachers are also activists, fighting for their students, themselves and other marginalized people. They see themselves as assets to schools.

鈥淢y immigration status inspires both my undocumented and documented students because they know all the obstacles that are faced by folks with my immigration status can be overcome,鈥 Reyes said. 鈥淭hey know that if I could do it, that’s something that they could do as well.鈥

Without undocumented teachers, educator shortages across states could worsen. California has spent about . Still, the state issued 11 percent fewer teaching credentials between the 2021-22 and 2022-23 school years. Last year, it enacted legislation to eliminate barriers to entry, dropping a standardized test teaching candidates had to pass to demonstrate competence in math, reading and writing. But since undocumented immigrants aren鈥檛 widely perceived to be career professionals, the fact that schoolchildren nationwide depend on them has received scant attention in the broader immigration debate.

Maria Miranda, elementary vice president of the United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) labor union, said undocumented teachers 鈥渂ring a different perspective to the table, a different skill set.鈥

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, the nation鈥檚 second largest teacher labor union, said DACA recipients in classrooms have strengthened the United States.

鈥淭hey are role models, like all teachers, and should be treated as such, but instead, they are made to feel uncertain and fearful as their protections are challenged in court and as the Trump administration promotes mass deportations, even from like schools that were once considered off limits,鈥 Weingarten said. 鈥淚mmigration reform can鈥檛 be used as an excuse to rip teachers out of classrooms, where they are so desperately needed.鈥

A toddler-aged Reyes stands in the sand at the beach, smiling toward her father, who is partially visible and holding her hand.
Reyes at 1 year old with her father. (Angelica Reyes)

When Reyes was about to register for the SAT during her senior year in high school, one misinformed guidance counselor asked her why she planned to take the college entrance exam, insisting that higher education was off limits to undocumented students.

鈥淚 was devastated. It broke my heart,鈥 Reyes said. 鈥淚 remember crying and telling my mom, 鈥業 worked hard, for what?鈥欌

Since 2001, however, California has extended access to who have lived there long term. Unaware of this law and under the assumption that her counselor was correct, Reyes missed the deadline for the SAT and for the application to University of California schools, so she enrolled in a community college she could afford, a common path for many undocumented immigrants.

Then, in 2011, a state law was enacted that made her cry tears of gratitude: the . The policy allows undocumented immigrants who entered the United States before they were 16 to obtain financial aid if they鈥檝e earned qualifying credits at California schools. These young people have been nicknamed Dreamers after the , a 2001 federal bill that would have given them legal status had it succeeded.

Reyes said that when she decided to apply to the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), a community college counselor took in her light brown skin and wavy black mane and without so much as seeing the 4.0 GPA in her transcript, told her to apply somewhere less competitive.

鈥淚’m a competitive student!鈥 Reyes recalled balking. 鈥淪he opened my chart and she was, like, 鈥極h, you actually are.鈥 Her tune changed so quickly. It was really infuriating because if I had believed her, like many students believe counselors, I would have not gone to UCLA.鈥

In college, Reyes had to make a choice about her career path. Her research project on youth activism at Abraham Lincoln High School, where she graduated in 2010, had drawn her to education. 鈥淚 realized that’s where I was needed,鈥 she said.

It was at Lincoln High in March 1968 that students spearheaded the protests known as the Chicano Blowouts or East Los Angeles Walkouts. With signs stating almost from Lincoln and other schools in historically Mexican-American East L.A. walked out of classes for a week to protest their substandard education.

Black-and-white photo of students holding protest signs outside Abraham Lincoln High School demanding equal education and language rights.
Chicano student walkouts in front of Abraham Lincoln High School in East Los Angeles during the 1968 blowouts. (LAPL)

Back then, students could be paddled for speaking Spanish, and with few advanced courses at Eastside schools, they were routinely steered to vocational classes like auto shop. These inequities contributed to a . Jailed for their activism against these circumstances, the teenagers garnered community support that ushered in sweeping policy changes 鈥 bilingual instruction, ethnic studies and more Latino teachers.

Today, the 肠补谤苍颈肠别谤铆补蝉, bungalow homes and palm trees along North Broadway Avenue, leading to 93 acres of green hills, offer no hint of the past tumult, but a mural at Lincoln commemorates the walkouts of nearly six decades ago.

Through her research, which also explored youth activism of the 2010s, Reyes learned that contemporary Lincoln High students continued to have unmet needs, such as support applying for college financial aid or accessing legal services as members of immigrant households. So when Lincoln High teachers asked if she wanted to develop a space to serve students, Reyes threw herself into the effort. The 鈥 named after a lead activist of the Chicano Blowouts and the inspiration for the 鈥 opened at Lincoln in 2015.

鈥淲e established programming for immigrant students, for immigrant parents. We did immigrant and educational history,鈥 Reyes said. 鈥淚t’s still a resource for students at Lincoln, and we’ve expanded it to several other schools.鈥

Working at the Dream Center for three years convinced her that teaching was the best way to reach undocumented and marginalized youth. Rather than dismiss them, as she had been dismissed by school counselors, she would inspire students to excel academically regardless of legal status. In 2012, four years before she graduated from UCLA with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in sociology and six years before she earned her master鈥檚 in education from the university, DACA enabled undocumented students like herself to become career professionals.

In 2017, the year Reyes began teaching, the Migration Policy Institute estimated that as many as . But today the number of DACA-recipient educators is 25 percent lower as litigation has frozen new applications.

Reyes wears a cap and gown, holding flowers and standing with three smiling family members on graduation day.
Reyes surrounded by family at her high school graduation. (Angelica Reyes)

It鈥檚 complicated: Those two words capture Reyes鈥 feelings about DACA. Although the program allowed her to teach, she has long viewed it as flawed, exploitative and a 鈥渃onstant reminder鈥 she isn鈥檛 鈥渇ully accepted.鈥

DACA stems from the activism of undocumented college students frustrated that the DREAM Act failed and that their immigration status would limit their potential, said Jennifer R. N谩jera, author of 鈥.鈥 Fighting for immigrant rights, they found a purpose.

Like the DREAM Act, DACA was reserved for young people who came to the United States as children and didn’t have criminal histories. 鈥淭hey had to graduate from high school or college or go to the military, show 鈥榞ood moral character,鈥欌 said N谩jera, an associate professor in the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Riverside. Instead of citizenship, Obama鈥檚 executive order 鈥減rovided temporary relief from deportation, a two-year relief specifically, that could be renewed, and a work permit, which was a big deal.鈥

While DACA recipients cherished their professional opportunities, some contended that the policy cast them as second-class citizens, N谩jera said.

That includes Reyes.

鈥淚 knew it was a Band-Aid,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n fact, when I first started teaching, my DACA expired because of an issue with the application. They had asked me if I was in a gang, and apparently I didn’t check off the X hard enough, so I wasn’t hired at the beginning of the year. I remember feeling this immense frustration.鈥

Los Angeles Unified employs about 300 DACA-recipient school personnel, according to Miranda of the UTLA labor union. As Reyes鈥 teaching career started, DACA weathered the first of multiple legal challenges. Trump rescinded the program during his first term, a move the Supreme Court later blocked; at the time, Reyes told her students about possibly losing her job. Since then, she has endured several other threats to DACA , though she鈥檚 now pained to tell her students that the program isn鈥檛 accepting new applicants.

DACA, she said, must be replaced with a sustainable alternative.

In a , Trump said, 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have to do something with鈥 DACA recipients. 鈥淭hey were brought into this country many years ago鈥 and 鈥渋n many cases, they鈥檝e become successful.鈥

But that sympathy has been absent from his immigration policies since he resumed office. He has issued an executive order . He has also lifted restrictions on immigration enforcement in 鈥渟ensitive locations鈥 such as churches, hospitals and schools, prompting parents nationwide to keep kids out of class.

A young girl looks out from the arms of an adult while holding a small Mexican flag during an immigration rights protest.
A protester waves the Mexican flag during a demonstration for immigration rights outside Los Angeles City Hall on February 5, 2025. (Qian Weizhong/Getty Images)

鈥淎 lot of times, the children are U.S. citizens and the parents are concerned,鈥 Reyes said. 鈥淏ut I’ve had students who shared that their parents are U.S. citizens, and they’re still scared because they know that U.S. citizens are also caught up in these raids. So, this isn’t about criminality. It’s about the targeting of Brown folks.鈥

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and other federal authorities reportedly at least 10 U.S. citizens, , in the first 100 days of Trump鈥檚 second term.

Last month, the California state superintendent presented to limit ICE appearances at schools as absences have spiked 鈥 and schools could lose millions of dollars since their funding is tied to average daily student attendance. About half of California children belong to , while one in five live in mixed-status families with at least one undocumented parent.

鈥淚t’s very taxing emotionally for our members and our students,鈥 Miranda said of ICE enforcement. 鈥淲e have students at the elementary level who are terrified of seeing anyone in uniform. Some of them are so young that they don’t know the difference between the police and immigration. It’s a very scary moment.鈥

When Trump targeted DACA during his first term, that disbanding the program could upend public education. But now she says her students deserve more than DACA鈥檚 鈥渂readcrumbs.鈥

鈥淲e need to fight for something new because my kids want to be chefs and doctors and lawyers, but they’re being held back by their immigration status,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t’s excruciating in two ways: One, I want my students to have the opportunities that they deserve to serve the community. And, two, I don’t know when I’m going to be taken from them because of my own uncertainty.鈥

For now, she knows that her presence makes a difference at her high school. Los Angeles Unified has an , according to UTLA. Of those, one in four is undocumented. After Reyes shared her immigration status with students during a recent lunchtime conversation, she said a ninth grader confessed that she planned to quit school because she, too, is undocumented. Learning Reyes managed to become a teacher made the girl reconsider.

鈥淚t was really beautiful to see that, like it reignited her hope to have a bright future,鈥 Reyes said.

Although the risks of revealing her status frighten her, her conscience compels her to, Reyes said. She quoted Mexican Revolution leader Emiliano Zapata: 鈥淚t’s better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.鈥

Staying silent as the president attacks immigrants would make it hard for Reyes to face the youth in her life 鈥 her son, especially.

Reyes smiles in her graduation gown, holding flowers and wearing a decorated cap that reads 鈥渁bolish ICE 鈥 not 1 more!鈥
Reyes after receiving her master鈥檚 degree in education from UCLA. (Angelica Reyes)

Whenever a state turned red on Election Night, Nathan Reyes felt his anxiety shoot up. Still, he held out hope Kamala Harris would win. Then the Electoral College math made it plain: Donald Trump would be president again.

Although he鈥檚 a U.S. citizen, Nathan wondered what lay ahead for his undocumented relatives under a president promising mass deportations.

鈥淚 feel worried for them because if they get deported, what am I going to do?鈥 he asked. 鈥淲here am I going to stay?鈥

So, he began to plan. He and his family would 鈥渉ave to pick our poison鈥 鈥 stay in a country hostile to their presence or self-deport together to Mexico regardless of citizenship status.

That her son, with a pile of ringlets and a round cherubic face, was even considering these options stunned Reyes. Nathan is in seventh grade.

鈥淚 was like, 鈥極h, my God, this kid is 12,鈥欌 Ang茅lica Reyes said. 鈥淲hy is he talking about this?鈥欌

Rummaging through a bin of childhood possessions in her mother鈥檚 bedroom last year, Reyes found a poem she wrote in fourth grade about her fear of police. Her parents were street food vendors, , so Reyes realized growing up that one brush with the law could have seen them deported.

Just as she did not have a childhood free of deportation fears, neither has her son.

Nathan, now 13, is hardly the only youth pondering the possibility of a relative鈥檚 departure, according to , a psychologist in Long Beach, California. She said children are leaving school with 鈥淜now Your Rights鈥 cards advising them of their civil liberties during ICE encounters, but they may not understand the information.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e just feeling fear,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e being told something’s gonna happen. So mental health wise, you’re looking at chronic anxiety. You’re looking at hypervigilance.鈥

Reyes and her teenage son Nathan stand side-by-side holding hands in front of a yellow school building, both looking directly at the camera.
Ang茅lica Reyes and her son Nathan Reyes in front of Abraham Lincoln High School in East Los Angeles, California, on February 9, 2025. (Zaydee Sanchez/The 19th)

To gain some sense of control, they may overconsume social media, leading to racing thoughts, rapid heart rate and sleeping difficulties.

鈥淚t’s this chronic nonstop anxiety because the state of uncertainty feels never-ending, and in many ways, it is not ending, right?鈥 Sanchez said. 鈥淭here’s different news every day.鈥

By speaking openly with children, parents can help them better manage stress, she said. Teachers, if they鈥檙e permitted, can broach the topic of immigration. Nathan appreciated how his Spanish teacher led a class discussion after the election.

鈥淪haring your feelings and emotions and finding that a lot of other people are feeling very similar can bring comfort to you,鈥 he said.

Reyes gave birth to her son while she was in college and briefly wed to his father. She applied for legal status as an immediate family member of a U.S. citizen, her spouse. But years passed before the federal government responded to her request, she said. By then, her marriage had ended.

鈥淚 don’t think people understand how long the path to citizenship can be, what it looks like, how costly and time-intensive it is,鈥 Sanchez said.

Reyes, who has not remarried, said being undocumented seeps into every aspect of her life, including romantic relationships. She feels obligated to tell prospective partners about her status.

鈥淚 remember to always be upfront, like, 鈥楬ey, I’m undocumented. I don’t want you to think I’m going to use you for papers,鈥欌 she said.

Reyes lives in one of the country鈥檚 , which include undocumented individuals and people with legal status or U.S. citizenship. If she gets deported, she has arranged for others to care for her son.

Her sister, two years younger, is a U.S. citizen. Asked if she resents that twist of fate, Reyes said, 鈥淚’m happy that she gets to be safe. I think that there’s a lot of pain and guilt for her.鈥

Her sister realizes, Reyes said, that her entire family could be taken away.

A younger Reyes and her son Nathan smile and throw their arms up while seated at a table with a bubbling orange bowl.
Reyes and her son Nathan doing a science experiment when he was little. (Angelica Reyes)

Should she be forced out of the only country she considers home, Reyes wants her son to know this: 鈥淚 would never willingly leave you. I am dedicated to you. I love you, and I will always be working as hard as possible to get back to you.鈥

For Nathan, it is mind-boggling that anyone would want his mother out. He doesn鈥檛 understand why politicians demonize immigrants. Trump launched his first presidential campaign calling them criminals and continues to malign them.

鈥淢y mom has done a lot of good for her community,鈥 Nathan said. 鈥淪he has organized a finders keepers closet where people who don’t have some resources they need, like canned food or clothes, can take what they need.鈥

Just as Nathan defends her honor, Reyes vouches for her parents. Her mother is now a nail technician and her father is a food vendor. Growing up, she said, she watched them visit the sick, volunteer at churches and fundraise for the poor.

鈥淲henever they saw a need, they stepped up, and they didn’t wait for someone else to help,鈥 she said.

She鈥檚 hurt when people sympathize with Dreamers while disparaging their parents, that the immigration system paints family members as saints or sinners. The DACA recipients she鈥檚 researched feel similarly, N谩jera said.

鈥淢any of the students that I interviewed were always talking about their parents,鈥 N谩jera said. 鈥淭hey did not want their stories to be divorced from their parents and their family stories. These families, they’re units.鈥

But the Dream Act caused a migrant generational divide, insinuating that those who arrived in this country as children deserve citizenship, while their parents and others who arrived as adults do not, N谩jera said.

A colorful mural shows scenes from Chicano and immigrant activism, including raised fists, 鈥淗UELGA鈥 signs, Day of the Dead skulls, and depictions of farmworkers and students.
Ang茅lica Reyes helped paint the red and yellow skulls on the mural across the street from Abraham Lincoln High School in East Los Angeles, where she graduated. (Zaydee Sanchez/The 19th)

Migration often occurs out of necessity. For example, after NAFTA took effect in 1994, U.S. agricultural exports flooded Mexico, displacing workers, according to Edward Alden, a distinguished visiting professor in the College of Business and Economics at Western Washington University. Four years earlier, over 4 million Mexican migrants were in the United States, a figure that ballooned to nearly 13 million 鈥 around 9 percent of Mexico鈥檚 population 鈥 by 2008.

Reyes said NAFTA crushed the bakery business her father鈥檚 side of the family owned because it could not compete with the U.S. companies that swooped in. Her parents migrated north to earn higher wages.

Today, economic instability is but one of the reasons that motivate migrants.

鈥淎 lot of the Venezuelans are leaving Venezuela because it’s a violent, dangerous place, and the government has destroyed the economy in different ways,鈥 Alden said. 鈥淪ame thing out of Central America. These are people who aren’t necessarily leaving for economic reasons. They’re doing it for personal safety reasons.鈥

Reyes said she has Central American students who fled horrors. She wants them to feel safe in the United States, and the fact Los Angeles Unified has pledged not to cooperate with immigration officials voluntarily provides some comfort. Run by a , the from entering two schools in April.

The fear of raids on campuses has traumatized her students, Reyes said. 鈥淚t’s so difficult to convince my students that they are worthy of love and that they’re worthy of respect and that they deserve civil rights.鈥

It is equally difficult to keep advocating for herself, she said. But as the threat of deportation looms, she has no choice but to keep fighting.

鈥淚t’s hard to know that I can’t earn citizenship and that I can’t give my kid stability or safety,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 feel like if I could earn it, I would have three citizenships. I would have put in the work.鈥

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