By targetting local and state boards of education in the eleven aforementioned states, nationalist policymakers could effect not only local but national change. Texas has long had an undue, though now declining, influence on the nation’s textbooks both in standards and in content. A coalition of eleven states with nationalist and natinoalist education administrations could radically shift the direction of educational content and material for all of America’s students and begin pushing back against the anti-American forces which have come to dominate the education system.
In some states a push to take control of the education system would also open up the possibility of reining in the out of control university system. In Michigan, Colorado, Nebraska, and Nevada the governing boards of public universities (such as the internationally renowned University of Michigan) are publicly elected.
And while enacting change at the state and university level would be monumental, most of the policy work is going to take place at the local, community, level. According to the Michigan Association of School Boards the areas of responsibility for local boards include: Goal setting, policy, hiring and evaluating superintendents, budgeting, decisions on curriculums (and accompanying materials), decisions regarding staffing, and the use and construction of facilities for students and the district.
The National School Boards Assocation goes even further, stating: “Most school board members are elected by people in their community to represent their values, views, and desires for the public schools in their district. As selected leaders in their community, they consistently communicate with the public to keep community members abreast of challenges, ideas, and progress.”
This quote is useful in that it serves as an acknowledgement of the power of local school boards within American communities. Americans seeking to effect change would have every opportunity on the nation’s school boards.
There are more than 81,000 school board seats across the United States, most of which carry 4-5 year terms in the major states. Most importantly for nationalists seeking to run is that the cost of running for school-board is not especially prohibitive. While modern senate races now regularly cost more than $15.7 million per candidate per campaign, and House races are averaging $2 million per candidate, the average cost of a school board run is less than $5,000. Only in 13% of races did a school board candidate spent more than $5,000. Nationalist and pro-American patriots looking to make change in their states and communities have an immense opportunity in the form of boards of education.