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Posts tagged #StudentProtests

Rising Number of Student Protests Against Immigration Enforcement in U.S. Schools A growing wave of student protests has been recorded across the United States targeting Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). According to Defending Education, an organization monitoring schools, there have been 334 strikes and protests so far this year, with at least 306 directed against immigration authorities. The trend, which dates back to 2022, spans 236 school districts in 48 states and the District of Columbia. Colorado’s Poudre School District has seen particularly high participation, with nearly 2,000 students joining a series of strikes in early February, including events at Fort Collins, Boltz, Webber, Preston, Lincoln, and Rocky Mountain high schools. In Washington, D.C., over 1,000 students from 15 schools marched to the Lincoln Memorial in late February, protesting immigration enforcement and carrying signs calling for family unity and resistance against ICE. Similar demonstrations occurred in Los Angeles, where around 200 students gathered at City Hall. Defending Education notes that these protests reflect a broader, multi-year trend of politically motivated student activism, often aligned with left-leaning causes. The organization also reported a Minnesota teacher giving extra credit for viewing content critical of ICE, further fueling discussions about political expression in schools. School officials have largely refrained from commenting on potential disciplinary measures for participating students.

Rising Number of Student Protests Against Immigration Enforcement in U.S. Schools

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#studentprotests #ice

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Student Protests Expand Across Iranian Universities Following Deadly Crackdown A new wave of anti-government protests has erupted across multiple Iranian universities following their reopening after a temporary suspension of in-person classes. The demonstrations, which began on Saturday, mark the first large-scale student mobilizations since the nationwide unrest in December and January that ended in a deadly crackdown. Human rights groups report thousands of deaths during that period, with figures varying significantly between independent organizations, US officials, and the Iranian government. Verified footage shows protests at at least eight universities in Tehran, as well as campuses in Mashhad and Isfahan. Students have been recorded chanting anti-regime slogans, including 'woman, life, freedom,' a phrase associated with the 2022 protest movement after the death of Mahsa Amini in police custody. Some demonstrators burned the current Iranian flag, while others displayed the pre-1979 'lion and sun' flag and voiced support for Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the former Shah. However, some videos also show opposition to both the current Islamic Republic and the former monarchy. Clashes between students and members of the Basij paramilitary force have been documented at several campuses, including Sharif University of Technology and Amirkabir University. Pro-government students have also organized counter-protests, burning US and Israeli flags. State media acknowledged limited demonstrations and reported disciplinary measures against some participants. Unrest also spread to the western city of Abdanan following the arrest of academic and activist Yaqoob Mohammadi. Videos show confrontations and gunfire during protests demanding his release. He was later freed, returning to public support near his home.

Student Protests Expand Across Iranian Universities Following Deadly Crackdown

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#iran #studentprotests #unrest

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Back to Campus, Back to Protest: A New Student Wave After the January Uprising As campuses reopened, students launched sit-ins, memorial assemblies, and anti-regime chants—met by Basij-led disruption, arrests, mass summons, and a rapid push to move classes online. The new wave of student protests began on Saturday 2 Esfand 1404 (21 February 2026), the first day of in-person reopening after long closures linked to the bloody January uprising. From the outset, student gatherings framed the reopening not as a return to “normal,” but as a collective commemoration—of students killed in the January uprising and, more broadly, of those massacred by the Islamic Republic. By Wednesday 6 Esfand 1404 (25 February 2026), the protests had entered their fifth day, spreading across Tehran and multiple cities. Sit-ins (tahasson), rallies, and memorial ceremonies continued even as universities tightened entry controls, summoned and detained students, and shifted teaching online—moves widely read on campuses as security measures rather than academic decisions. Slogans and Political Repertoires Across universities, students repeatedly combined memorial rituals with openly confrontational, anti-authoritarian slogans. Common chants included: * “Death to the dictator” * “Political prisoners must be freed” * “Poverty, corruption, high prices—we’ll fight until overthrow” * “Until the cleric is shrouded, this homeland won’t be a homeland” * “This year is the year of blood—Sayyed Ali will be overthrown” * “We didn’t give martyrs to compromise…” * “One is killed, a thousand rise behind them” * “Woman, Life, Freedom” Students also articulated a clear rejection of rival authoritarian projects and factional monopolies. In Tehran University’s Social Sciences faculty, chants included “Woman, Life, Freedom—an Iranian republic,” alongside “Neither monarchy, nor leadership, nor Rajavi reaction,” signaling both anti-theocratic and anti-restorationist positioning inside the same assemblies. At some campuses, however, reports also noted that supporters of Reza Pahlavi raised pro-monarchist slogans—an indication of the contested political field within and around student mobilization. The protests were not only vocal but performative. Students held silent sit-ins, read out the names of those killed in the January uprising, and sang widely recognized patriotic songs such as “Oh Iran.” In several universities—including Alzahra and Amirkabir in Tehran—students reportedly set fire to the Islamic Republic’s flag. In Alzahra, there were also reports of “sandoos” [what is sandoos?] being thrown toward Basij members during clashes, turning a symbol of state patronage into an object of ridicule. Assemblies, Sit-ins, and Memorial Ceremonies A defining feature of this wave was the way assemblies merged mourning with political refusal. At the University of Tehran, memorial events were held for named victims, including Raha Behloulipour (a student of Italian literature) on Monday 4 Esfand 1404 (23 February 2026). Participants chanted “Woman, Life, Freedom,” “Death to the dictator,” and “This flower has been torn apart—its gift has become the homeland,” linking personal loss to a collective narrative of national sacrifice. In another Tehran University ceremony—held for Mohammadreza Moradali—students reportedly prevented Basij attempts to appropriate the memorial and recast him as a pro-regime figure, pushing back with chants and collective control of the space. At Shahid Beheshti University, students in Nursing, Pharmacy, and Midwifery staged a silent sit-in that later turned into collective chanting and protest singing. At Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, students held a sit-in in the Engineering faculty and sang “Ey Iran” explicitly in memory of those killed in the January uprising. At Kharazmi University, the trigger on Wednesday 6 Esfand 1404 (25 February 2026) was the announcement of online classes before teaching had properly begun—students responded with a sit-in and chants such as “We stand to the end, sworn by the blood of our comrades,” “If it goes online, our chants will get harsher,” and “Freedom, freedom, freedom.” They also commemorated Saghar Seyfollahi, a graduate, by name—showing how this wave continually braided political demands with remembrance. Basij Disruption, Security Pressure, and Campus Closures Repression in this wave was marked not only by state security forces but by systematic intervention from student Basij and university security (harasat). At the University of Tehran, security reportedly intensified gate checks and controlled movement across the central campus on Wednesday 6 Esfand 1404 (25 February 2026). At Ferdowsi University, Basij forces reportedly tried to disrupt the gathering and were met with booing and the chant: “Liar Basiji—where is your student card?”—a slogan that targets Basij legitimacy inside the university by challenging their claim to student status. In other campuses, the response escalated further. Reports described Basij members using tear gas or pepper spray in some universities, with injuries also reported: in Khajeh Nasir University of Technology, one student’s head was reportedly seriously injured during violent Basij actions, and attacks were also reported at Iran University of Science and Technology. At Shiraz University, the preventive logic was stark: entrances were reportedly blocked, officials declared the university “closed,” and heavy deployment—including dozens of motorbikes and multiple patrol vehicles—was reported around the campus perimeter. Students attempting to gather off-campus (including at a library near Namazi Square) reportedly faced closures and dispersal tactics. There were also reports of plainclothes forces entering campuses by bus, including Beheshti and Iran University of Science and Technology—suggesting planning and coordination beyond routine campus security. Arrests, Summons, and Administrative Punishments Alongside street-level intimidation, the state relied heavily on disciplinary and administrative coercion. At Iran University of Art, three students—Pouyan Jomeili, Sina Ghanimati, and Kiarash Najafzadeh—were reportedly detained by plainclothes forces during a protest where chants included “Death to the dictator” and “Political prisoners must be freed,” and where students demanded the release of detainees by name, including “Mahyar Hajimohammadi must be freed.” In Tehran, reports indicated dozens of summons to disciplinary committees: more than 45 University of Tehran students were reportedly summoned in one recent stretch, with claims that students were pressured to sign “pledges” without evidence. Elsewhere, a larger figure was cited by the newspaper Shargh: at least 180 Tehran students summoned via text in three days, and more than 60 reportedly barred from campus through phone calls alone. Bans on entry, loss of access to education platforms, and intensified surveillance were also reported—at Alzahra, for example, entry controls were reportedly tightened via gates equipped with facial recognition, alongside case-by-case checks through student systems. Threat campaigns extended beyond campus, reaching families. At Yazd University, sources reported a wave of threatening calls—often from “private numbers”—targeting at least 276 students, frequently contacting parents and alleging participation in protests or damage to public property. One account described a student’s father being hospitalized with a heart condition after such a call. Separately, a student activist case drew attention in Mamasani: Alireza Rezaei (a law student at Islamic Azad University, Nourabad Mamasani) was reportedly arrested at home on Monday 4 Esfand 1404 (23 February 2026) with his two brothers, followed by the reported arrest of his father after visiting the local Intelligence Office on Tuesday 5 Esfand 1404 (24 February 2026). Online Classes as a Security Response As protests spread, many universities pivoted toward online instruction “until the end of the year”—a move widely interpreted by students as an attempt to drain campuses of crowds and assemblies. Islamic Azad University announced that theoretical courses would be held online from Saturday 9 Esfand 1404 (28 February 2026) until the end of 1404 (20 March 2026), officially citing Ramadan and scheduling issues, while postponing practical and lab courses to 15 Farvardin 1405 (4 April 2026). State universities including Kurdistan and Zanjan also announced online teaching for undergraduate programs through the end of the year, while Kharazmi University issued a similar notice for both its Tehran and Karaj campuses. On the ground, these announcements repeatedly intersected with protest dynamics—students at Kharazmi, for example, staged a sit-in precisely because the online shift was announced before classes had even begun. Official Reframing and the Battle Over the Dead The protests are inseparable from the unresolved question of the January uprising’s death toll—and from the state’s effort to control the meaning of those deaths. On Sunday 19 Bahman 1404 (8 February 2026), Masoud Habibi, the Deputy for Cultural and Student Affairs at the Ministry of Health, acknowledged for the first time that “close to 100” students were killed during the January uprising protests, while framing many victims as “martyrs” based on the Supreme Leader’s view and emphasizing claims of “foreign” or “terrorist” involvement. Human rights groups reported vastly higher figures. HRANA, the Human Rights Activists News Agency, stated that by Saturday 18 Bahman 1404 (7 February 2026), at least 6,961 people had been killed in the January uprising protests, and that the number of detainees had reached 51,465, including 112 students—while also noting thousands of cases still under review. Alongside the numbers, families reportedly described intense pressure to alter the narrative of death—being pushed to label slain relatives not as protesters but as Basij members or regime-linked “martyrs,” sometimes under threats tied to the return of bodies or permission for funerals. This is the backdrop against which students’ memorial readings, name lists, and chants insist: the dead will not be administratively rewritten. What This Wave Signals This protest wave has made the reopening of universities itself into a confrontation: campuses as public squares, classrooms as sites of mourning and refusal. Students have expanded their repertoire—from silent sit-ins to flag burnings, from chanting to singing, from memorial ceremonies to direct challenges against Basij legitimacy—while the state responds through a combined strategy of Basij intimidation, security deployments, arrests, mass summons, bans, and online “depopulation” of campuses. What emerges is not a single campus story but a national pattern: the university as a renewed center of anti-regime politics, precisely at the moment the state attempted to restore “normality” after the January uprising.

Back to Campus, Back to Protest: A New Student Wave After the January Uprising #StudentProtests #BackToCampus

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MSN

Idaho students:
www.msn.com/en-us/news/u... #idaho #studentprotests

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A school suspended 323 students after ICE protest. They protested again. Families of students at a Virginia high school received an email Thursday warning that students could face disciplinary action if they left campus while participating in a walkout Friday.

Hell yeah.
www.detroitnews.com/story/news/n...
#virginia #studentprotests

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Students join Austin protest against ICE following citywide walkouts - Hilltop Views Students from St. Edward’s University marched in unity with their voices loud, joining hundreds of demonstrators in downtown Austin on Jan. 30 to protest the actions and policies of U.S Immigrations a...

www.hilltopviewsonline.com/32106/news/s... #texas #studentprotests

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Oak Hill High School students walked out of class in protest of ICE in West Virginia - WOAY-TV Oak Hill High School students walked out of class today in protest of immigration enforcement in West Virginia

Students remain the bravest and best
woay.com/oak-hill-hig... #westvirginia #studentprotests

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May 1, 1969: Fred Rogers testifies before the Senate Subcommittee on Communications
May 1, 1969: Fred Rogers testifies before the Senate Subcommittee on Communications YouTube video by Road Less Marveled

"I'm very much concerned, as I know you
are, about what's being delivered to our children in this country."

What would Fred Rogers have to say about what's happening today?

#studentprotests #protectkids #civilliberties #fightICE #mrrogers

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Florida students walking out to protest ICE: What are their rights? Florida students are protesting ICE by walking out of schools. What are their rights?

www.tallahassee.com/story/news/s... #studentprotests

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Ravenwood High students walk out against ICE activity in Tennessee The demonstration was one of several across Middle Tennessee in recent weeks.

www.yahoo.com/news/article... #studentprotests #tennessee #protests

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More than 100 T.C. Roberson High School students walk out to protest against ICE More than 100 students at T.C. Roberson High School in Asheville participated in a walkout Tuesday morning in protest of recent immigration enforcement.

wlos.com/news/local/d... #studentprotests #protests #northcarolina

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200+ students at A.C. Reynolds High School latest to hold anti-ICE walkout in WNC More students in western North Carolina (WNC) held a walkout Wednesday, Feb. 18, gathering for a peaceful protest against ICE.

wlos.com/news/local/a... #studentprotests #northcarolina #protests

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Austin students protest ICE on Presidents Day as Paxton investigates more school walkouts Students pushed back against the recent criticism by state leadership over student walkouts in the Austin area.

www.kut.org/education/20... #studentprotests #texas #protests

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Students Across the U.S. Are Protesting ICE. Texas Wants to Punish Their Schools.

Texas officials threatened funding cuts, arrests, and possible district takeovers in response to student ICE walkouts, signaling state-level governance retaliation against youth protest participation. #ICE #Texas #StudentProtests #Governance #GregAbbott #NYT

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Students Across the U.S. Are Protesting ICE. Texas Wants to Punish Their Schools.

Students in more than three dozen states walked out to protest ICE-related deportation tactics, demonstrating nationwide youth mobilization and escalating school-centered protest activity. #ICE #StudentProtests #YouthMobilization #UnitedStates #NYT

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Backlash against student ICE protests targets educators, schools — Chalkbeat State leaders in Texas, Arizona, Florida, and Oklahoma want teachers to face consequences when they assist or help organize student protests.

#ICEstapo 💀🥶💀
#schools
#studentprotests
#edusky
apple.news/Abari9j-8Qn2...

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Students lead walkouts at three Northwest Indiana high schools to protest ICE Hundreds of students in Portage, Griffith and Munster held walkouts Thursday to voice their opposition to actions by ICE.

www.chicagotribune.com/2026/02/12/n... #indiana #studentprotests #protests

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www.fox21news.com/news/local/s... #colorado #studentprotests #protests

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www.wkrn.com/news/local-n... #tennessee #studentprotests #protests

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Sherman students stage ICE protest Thursday afternoon, some Sherman High School students walked out of classes protesting against the federal government's handling of immigration cases.

www.kten.com/news/texas-h... #studentprotests #protests #texas

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Lee County board responds to student walkouts; parents press for real-time notification Board members and the superintendent addressed recent student walkouts related to immigration policy, citing Tinker v. Des Moines and promising investigation. Parents and community members demanded earlier notification, clearer supervision, and review of safety procedures.

Lee County School Board faces heated discussions after 3,400 students protest, sparking calls for better communication and civic engagement in schools.

Get the details!

#LeeSchoolDistricts #FL #CitizenPortal #StudentProtests #CivicLearning #LeeSchoolDistricts #SafetyProcedure

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The principal of Newark Memorial HS is threating the student body that any walkout or other protests will result in detention and elimination of activities or events, including but not limited to, canceling Senior Prom.

As far as I can find out, Newark Memorial is the only school in the Tri-Cities that is actively working to prevent any activities, OR SPEACH, that is about ICE.

During the recent walkout he locked the school down after the walkout started, including the gates and building doors, then took pictures of any of the students who had been in the walkout and been locked outside. 

 We need to get the school board involved.

The principal of Newark Memorial HS is threating the student body that any walkout or other protests will result in detention and elimination of activities or events, including but not limited to, canceling Senior Prom. As far as I can find out, Newark Memorial is the only school in the Tri-Cities that is actively working to prevent any activities, OR SPEACH, that is about ICE. During the recent walkout he locked the school down after the walkout started, including the gates and building doors, then took pictures of any of the students who had been in the walkout and been locked outside. We need to get the school board involved.

#StudentProtests
This is happening at a high school in Newark CA.
Makes me wonder if the principal has a side gig with ICE, like that pastor back east.

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Students climbing from a burning Dakar university building: a snapshot of neglect and rage. Not an accident, but a predictable consequence of underfunded education & suppressed dissent. When 'infrastructure' burns, it's often the state's failures on display. #Senegal #StudentProtests

Read more: htt

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Columbia student's ICE detention. The timing & selective enforcement are no accident. This is how protest gets criminalized. #FreeLeqaa #StudentProtests

Read more: piaz.news/article/when-a-protester...

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Abbott threatens to strip schools' funding after student anti-ICE walkouts, arrests at protest Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is threatening to strip funding from schools after hundreds of students walked out in protest of ICE operations and immigration policies.

www.fox7austin.com/news/greg-ab... #Texas #StudentProtests

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Teen girl detained after armed man confronts her near Chandler school While a girl was apprehended at a protest in Chandler, an SUV that pushed through a crowd at an intersection fled, police said.

School walkouts in Phoenix protesting ICE caused student detentions and an armed civilian encounter, highlighting the risks of protests involving weapons and law enforcement. #Trump #ICE #StudentProtests #YouthMobilization #Arizona #ChandlerAZ #MesaAZ #ArizonaRepublic

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Fremont student hit in apparent hit-and-run during student-led ICE demonstration A driver hit a student during a student-led protest in Fremont on Thursday afternoon, a spokesperson with the Fremont Public Schools district said.

Civilian vehicle struck a student during a youth-led anti-ICE protest in Fremont, Nebraska, signaling escalating flashpoint violence and civilian counter-action risks at immigration demonstrations. #ICE #StudentProtests #VehicleViolence #FlashpointRisk #Nebraska #Fremont #NebraskaPublicMedia

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#Minnesota #GeneralStrike #Minneapolis #TwinCities #ShutDownICE #JusticeForReneeGood #JusticeForAlexPretti #ICEOutStrike #MinnesotaStrong #StudentProtests #Detroit #Michigan #HighSchool

Sign up: wsws.org/generalstrike

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#Minnesota #GeneralStrike #Minneapolis #TwinCities #ShutDownICE #StopICE #ICEOutOfMinnesota #JusticeForReneeGood #JusticeForAlexPretti #ICEOutStrike #MinnesotaStrong #NicolletAvenue #AbolishICE #ICEOutOfMN #NoMoreICE #Knoxville #Tennessee #StudentProtests

Sign up at: wsws.org/generalstrike

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Dhaka University to rename Mujibur Rahman Hall after slain radical Hadi - Yes Punjab News Dhaka University proposes renaming Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Hall to Osman Hadi Hall, raising concerns over historical legacy and academic freedom.

Dhaka University to rename Mujibur Rahman Hall after slain radical Hadi yespunjab.com?p=204055

#DhakaUniversity #HallRenaming #SheikhMujiburRahman #OsmanHadi #CaptainSitaraParvin #BangladeshNews #AcademicFreedom #DUCSU #BangladeshEducation #StudentProtests #PoliticalInterference #HistoricalLegacy

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