While President Trump took to his
usual 140-characters Thursday to tip-toe around his support for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program his administration plans to “wind down,” Tom Boasberg, Superintendent of the Denver Public Schools (DPS), tip-toed on the heels of U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos during her Colorado visit to implore her to use her office to protect the hundreds of DREAMers learning and teaching throughout DPS. Surely Boasberg could have navigated the technological limitations of Twitter to share his own thoughts on the issue. Instead, he opted for the oldest, and some might say, the most reliable form of communication that has ever existed—personal delivery. It’s true, instead of chasing DeVos all over cyberspace, Boasberg sent a messenger from his team to deliver a personal letter to DeVos along her travel route through Colorado. Why not just pull her aside during a visit to one of his schools? Well, that would require her to have actually visited a DPS school, which she did not. In fact, [pullquote position="right"]DeVos didn't visit a single school in any of Colorado's largest districts throughout Denver[/pullquote], Douglas or Jefferson counties. Nonetheless, Boasberg was determined to share a few words with DeVos. Chalkbeat Colorado
published the letter late Wednesday night. But why would the superintendent of Colorado's largest district need to chase the visiting U.S. Secretary of Education through cyberspace or anywhere else once she broke through the clouds of the Mile High City’s airspace? That’s because she had no plans to visit any of the schools in the abovementioned districts. And her agenda wasn’t even announced until Tuesday. DeVos and her team did stop by one of Colorado's private autism centers serving students with special needs as well as the Air Force Academy. Perhaps the secretary had so many requests from smaller, rural school districts that she felt compelled to honor those? Maybe she didn't want
the protesters that heckled her during her July visit to Colorado to create a distraction for students and teachers in the larger school districts? Or could it be that she didn't know what to say to the face of a student who comes to school wondering if their parents will be home when they return. Is it possible that she just didn't have the words to comfort the high school seniors who spent the summer thinking about what colleges to apply to but who now question whether the application is worth their time? There are plenty of causes for speculation on why DeVos visited or did not visit certain schools. And while she may have the
"heart" for DREAMers, she may not have had the words. But does that really matter now that she’s flown in and out of Colorado? What matters now are the voices of students, parents, teachers and even superintendents, using their words to rally support, invoke empathy, and influence change.