Preparation without panic

School safety includes the conditions students need to attend, trust, and learn.

Immigration enforcement activity near schools can affect attendance, student well-being, school climate, and family engagement even when no enforcement action takes place on campus. This page is intended to help school leaders understand realistic risks and prepare clear procedures without drifting into fear-mongering.

A practical frame for administrators

Not every school will face every issue described here. But the evidence shows that these concerns are real, measurable, and relevant to school operations. The goal is not to heighten fear. The goal is to help schools prepare for plausible scenarios that can disrupt learning and student support.

Exterior of a public school building

Why this belongs in school planning

School leaders routinely prepare for events that can interrupt normal operations: severe weather, health emergencies, campus threats, and community crises. Immigration enforcement activity can also affect how schools function, especially when it changes student attendance, increases anxiety, or erodes trust between families and schools.

National survey data show that many principals already see this as a planning issue. In a 2025 UCLA survey, 77.6% of public high school principals said they had created a school plan to respond to visits from federal agents, 47.2% said they had created a plan to address student needs if parents or guardians experience deportation, and 44.8% said they had created professional development for staff on how to support students from immigrant families.

77.6% have a response plan

Many school leaders already treat immigration-related disruptions as something that requires advance planning.

47.2% planned for family deportation impacts

Principals report preparing for how student needs may change if parents or guardians are removed from the community.

44.8% trained staff

A substantial share of schools have already provided staff development on supporting students from immigrant families.

Preparation is normal leadership

Clear procedures, training, and communication help schools respond consistently under stress.

1. Attendance disruptions

One of the clearest and best-documented risks is a drop in attendance after immigration enforcement activity in the surrounding community. A 2025 Stanford study using attendance data from five California school districts found that recent raids caused a 22% increase in daily student absences, with especially large effects among younger students.

National survey evidence points the same direction. In the UCLA principal survey, 63.8% of public high school principals said students from immigrant families had missed school because of immigration-related policies or political rhetoric, and 57.8% said immigrant parents or guardians had left the community during the school year.

For administrators, attendance disruption is not just a data point. It affects instruction, classroom continuity, intervention planning, and in some states school funding.

Students arriving at school in the morning
Portrait of a student in a school setting

2. Student stress and reduced readiness to learn

Students do not need to be directly targeted to be affected. Concern about a parent, sibling, relative, or classmate can change how students experience school. The UCLA survey found that 70.4% of public high schools were affected by heightened concern among students from immigrant families about their own well-being or their families' well-being.

In practice, that can appear as distraction, withdrawal, missed assignments, behavior changes, increased counseling needs, or lower academic engagement. A physically calm campus can still be a psychologically strained one. That is one of the weirder and more important truths in schooling: the room can look fine while learning conditions are quietly unraveling.

70.4% of principals report student worry

School leaders say concern about family safety is common enough to affect the learning environment.

Stress affects academics

Fear and uncertainty can reduce concentration, participation, and readiness to learn even without an on-campus incident.

Counseling demand may rise

Schools may need stronger mental-health and student-support responses during periods of heightened enforcement activity.

Emotional safety matters

School safety is not only physical access control. It also includes conditions that allow students to learn.

3. Bullying and deterioration of school climate

Immigration-related fear can also show up socially. In the UCLA survey, 35.6% of public high schools reported incidents of bullying directed toward students from immigrant families. When immigration status, ethnicity, language, or perceived status becomes a target for harassment, the issue becomes a broader student safety concern.

School climate is not fluff. It is part of the machinery of learning. Students who feel singled out, threatened, or humiliated are less likely to participate and more likely to disengage. Administrators should be prepared for the possibility that community rhetoric or local enforcement activity may spill into peer interactions on campus.

Students in a school hallway
Parent and teacher meeting in a school setting

4. Rumors, misinformation, and loss of family trust

In many schools, the first disruption is not direct contact with officers. It is uncertainty. Families may hear incomplete reports on social media, students may repeat rumors in hallways, and staff may receive urgent questions before facts are verified.

Research and policy reviews have warned that lack of clarity can lead families to keep children home or avoid school services. The same UCLA survey found that 57.8% of principals reported immigrant parents or guardians leaving the community during the school year, while 63.8% reported students missing school because of immigration-related fear or rhetoric.

For administrators, this means communication planning is part of safety planning. Schools that cannot quickly clarify what happened, what did not happen, and what their procedures are may see avoidable panic and a drop in family engagement.

5. Requests for access, records, or student contact

Direct contact with immigration authorities may be uncommon, but that is exactly why clear procedures matter. Rare, high-stress events are where organizations tend to make the most preventable mistakes.

Teacher helping a student in a classroom

Requests for school access

Staff may be asked to allow officers onto campus or into non-public spaces without understanding what documentation is required.

Teen students studying together at a table in school

Requests for student information

Schools may face pressure to release records or confirm information without going through proper district procedure and privacy review.

Students near a school bus

Requests to speak with a student

Without training, staff may not know who should handle the request, what access is allowed, or how to minimize disruption.

Why this matters operationally

The risk is not only the encounter itself. It is inconsistent handling: uncertainty about documents, informal disclosure of records, avoidable student disruption, and staff improvising under pressure. Clear school procedures reduce those risks.

6. Enrollment and longer-term disruption

Some effects extend beyond day-to-day attendance. A Stanford working paper on local ICE partnerships found that these partnerships reduced Hispanic student enrollment by nearly 10% within two years, with effects concentrated among elementary-age students.

That does not mean every district will see the same pattern. It does mean immigration enforcement policy can shape whether families feel able or willing to keep children in a given school system. For districts, that creates both educational and operational concerns.

Aerial view of a school campus

Nearly 10% enrollment decline

Local enforcement partnerships were associated with sizable drops in Hispanic student enrollment over two years.

Elementary students may be hit hardest

Some research found the strongest effects among younger students, suggesting family decisions may be especially protective at early ages.

Operational effects follow academic effects

Enrollment shifts influence staffing, intervention planning, school culture, and long term continuity.

Trust is infrastructure

Once trust erodes, many other school functions become harder to sustain.

School administrators reviewing safety plans

What school leaders can prepare for

  • Sudden spikes in absences after enforcement activity nearby
  • Students showing anxiety, distraction, or distress related to family safety
  • Bullying or harassment tied to immigration status or perceived status
  • Rumors that spread faster than verified information
  • Requests for student information or access to students
  • Reduced family engagement caused by fear or mistrust
  • Increased demand on counseling, administration, and communication systems

These are not arguments for panic. They are arguments for planning. Clear procedures, staff training, privacy protections, and family communication can help schools respond consistently and keep the focus on learning.

Sources

These links support the statistics and claims on this page and can also help administrators review the underlying research directly.

UCLA principal survey

Reported findings include 63.8% of principals saying students missed school due to immigration-related fear or rhetoric, 70.4% reporting student well-being concerns, 35.6% reporting bullying, and widespread school planning activity.

UCLA Newsroom summary

UCLA School of Education summary

Stanford enrollment study

Found that local ICE partnerships reduced Hispanic student enrollment by nearly 10% within two years.

Stanford SIEPR working paper

Safe-zone policy research

Found protective effects for academic outcomes, school climate, and graduation-related measures in California districts adopting safe-zone policies.

CGO research summary

Preparing for disruption is part of protecting education.

Schools cannot control the broader political environment. They can control whether staff know the rules, whether families receive clear communication, and whether students experience school as a place of stability.