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DOE launches portal for parents to report what’s happening in classrooms

The U.S. Department of Education (ED) launched a portal Thursday, allowing parents to report what's going on in their classrooms.

Parents can now Visit enddei.gov “There are discriminatory practices that are explained as closely as possible,” the section listing school districts and zip codes.

“The U.S. Department of Education is committed to ensuring that all students have access to meaningful learning that is not subject to divisive ideology and indoctrination,” the website says.

The submission form provides an outlet for students, parents, teachers and others to report “illegal discriminatory practices” at school. EDs use incident reports to “identify potential areas for investigation.”

Ag Bondi dismisses Dei lawsuit filed against police, fire department under the Biden administration

President Trump and the Department of Education. (Getty Images)

Educational education parent Nicole Neely told Fox News Digital that a portal is needed considering the widespread push to report incidents of this type.

“We have seen something, said something, said something, said something, not only obvious practices and policies, but also insidious proxy that has permeated education. With around 13,500 school districts and 4,000 degree awarding institutions, we can cover many of our hands.

The portal comes after President Donald Trump fulfilled his campaign promises shortly after he took office after crackdowns on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). Trump on January 22nd I signed an executive order End of DEI discrimination in federal workforce and federal government contracts and expenditures.

The executive order directed all sectors and agencies to end “private sector DEI discrimination,” including civil compliance investigations. Furthermore, the ED determines that new measures and practices are in violation of the Constitutional Admissions v.

Many Dei's supporters argue that this effort will correct historical injustice and systematic inequality.

Group of DEI workers appeal to stop Trump's executive order

Parents' rights supporters keep signs.

Parent rights advocates will keep their signs during the Chino Valley Unified School District Committee held on Thursday night, July 20, 2023 at Donlugo High School in Chino. (Getty Images)

“For years, parents have pleaded schools to focus on teaching practical skills such as reading, writing and mathematics instead of promoting critical theory, fraudulent sex education and divisive ideology, but their concerns have been completely polished, oc-laughed, or completely closed down.” Tiffany's Justice saidco-founder of Moms for Liberty, an organization that rose to prominence in a press release by highlighting educational content parents deemed inappropriate.

Since the Covid-19 pandemic, school board meetings have often become a controversial battle between parents and school board staff, sparking debate about the extent to which parents have their children's education.

Parents denounced school administrators on sexually explicit, LGBTQ-related books on display in school libraries and used in classrooms.

Parent Rally

Parents denounced school administrators on sexually explicit, LGBTQ-related books on display in school libraries and used in classrooms. (Provided by Becket)

Some teachers were troubled by their obligation to force them to use pronouns of students that were not consistent with their biological sex, resulting in their favorable, shaking legal battles.

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Lawmakers from the local school board to the state level have passed legislation that will help parents become more transparent with their child's education, curb DEI's efforts to influence community members, and implement strict book review policies that address progressive curricula such as key racial and gender theories taught in the classroom.

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