School & District Management

Are School Board Meetings Really Getting More Heated? What a New Study Says

By Evie Blad — June 30, 2025 4 min read
Kimberly Thompson, center, listens as Francis Howell School Board members talk in favor of rescinding all previously passed resolutions, including an anti-racism resolution, during a meeting on July 20, 2023 in O'Fallon, Mo. The Francis Howell School Board on Dec. 21, 2023, voted to drop elective Black history and literature courses at the district's high schools. Researchers found an uptick in conflict in school board meetings since 2020, but determined it was most concentrated in large urban and suburban districts.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

It’s not in your head: School board meetings really have gotten more heated in recent years.

But most of the time, school board meetings are relatively civil, and most of the recent high-conflict meetings occurred in a small number of districts in cities and suburbs, researchers found in an analysis of thousands of school board meetings.

“We find that most boards experience some kind of conflict at some point, but it’s not always about these extremely nationalized political issues,” said Tyler Simko, an incoming assistant professor of political science at the University of Michigan who coauthored the recent working paper released in June. “The most intense versions of these conflicts over issues like race, gender identity, and book bans are focused in larger city and suburban districts.”

The findings provide context for post-pandemic concerns about education politics that have contributed to superintendent turnover, sagging teacher morale, and concerns about district governance. The new dataset researchers created also provides a jumping off point for continuing research about local political polarization, the authors wrote.

What makes a school board meeting high-conflict?

Most research about perceived polarization in education politics relies on anecdotal evidence and survey data. The researchers wanted to find a more nuanced way to study conflict in school board meetings that did not solely focus on major issues driving national headlines, Simko said. After all, things like firing popular coaches, changing bus routes or catchment areas, and school start times are all classic friction points for school boards.

He and his co-researchers scoured the internet to identify YouTube videos of full school board meetings from 48 states. They downloaded the videos and generated transcripts, which they analyzed alongside federal data about district spending, size, and demographics. In all, they analyzed about 100,000 board meetings from 1,600 districts between 2010 and 2023.

To identify meetings with conflict, they developed a list of 25 issue-agnostic “conflict words” that frequently arise during tense exchanges—whether the subject concerned a national issue, like COVID-19 precautions, or a local issue, like the firing of a football coach. Those words include disgusted, ridiculous, evil, miserable, and furious.

The researchers deemed a meeting high-conflict if speakers and commenters used conflict words more than eight times—an amount per meeting that put it in the 75th percentile for use of conflict words. Low-conflict meetings had two or fewer conflict words, the 25th percentile.

The use of conflict words spiked in 2020, they found, as districts debated responses to the pandemic. The highest-conflict period documented in dataset occured in the second half of 2021, when districts saw increased tensions over critical race theory and book restrictions.

Before the pandemic, the data showed a spike in conflict words in early 2016, when states debated so-called “bathroom bills” to prohibit transgender students from using school facilities that align with their gender identity.

“When ranking the 25 most conflictual months in school board politics since 2015, 21 of the top 25 have occurred since January 2020,” the researchers wrote.

High-conflict meetings often focus on issues like race and sexuality

Even during the recent spike, most conflict was clustered in a small number of districts that tended to spend more dollars per-pupil, had more white students, and were located in cities and suburbs, the data showed.

Only 6% of districts in the dataset experienced a high-conflict meeting.

The terms that were more likely to be used in high-conflict meetings related to “cultural issues” such as race and sexuality, the researchers concluded. Those words include: racist, indoctrination, transgender, ideology, queer, and pronoun.

“Immunocompromised” was also frequently used in high-conflict meetings, reflecting the tense discussions related to masking and virus mitigation during the pandemic.

For most districts, fewer than a quarter of meetings were deemed high-conflict. And much of that conflict centered on local issues, like a New Jersey district’s four-and-a-half hour discussion of whether to cut its premilitary ROTC program in 2023.

“Collectively, our results suggest that issues of national concern are often brought into school board meetings, but the story is not simply one of national ‘puppet masters’ directing angry parents into their children’s school boards,” the study says.

While the researchers identified upticks in conflict in their dataset, it’s difficult to know whether those high-conflict meetings outnumbered those that occurred before school boards posted meeting videos online, Simko said.

“Maybe we could have written the exact same paper about debates over teaching evolution, if there had been videos of that,” he said. “Or we could have written a great paper about the Boston busing crisis.”

Events

Teaching Profession K-12 Essentials Forum Supporting the New K-12 Workforce: What Teachers Need to Stay at School
 Join this free virtual event to discover what teachers say they need to feel supported to stay in classrooms for the long haul.
College & Workforce Readiness K-12 Essentials Forum Career and Technical Education Takes Its Next Big Step
Join this free virtual event to hear creative approaches to modernize CTE programs and navigate the shift away from a near-exclusive focus on "college preparedness."

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

School & District Management LAUSD Taps Interim Chief as Superintendent 3 Days After Carvalho's Resignation
Andres Chait has served as a teacher, principal, and regional superintendent in Los Angeles.
Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times
6 min read
Acting Superintendent Andres Chait at a Los Angeles Unified School District Board meeting in Los Angeles on June 23, 2026 .
Acting Superintendent Andres Chait at a Los Angeles Unified School District Board meeting in Los Angeles on June 23, 2026. LAUSD has named Chait its new superintendent on a permanent basis following Alberto Carvalho's resignation earlier this week.
Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times via TNS
School & District Management Lessons Learned About Bold Tech Initiatives From the LAUSD Chief's Departure
Bold initiatives can cut both ways, says a leadership expert, sparking achievement gains or falling apart.
20260622 AMX US NEWS WHAT ALBERTO CARVALHOS RESIGNATION MEANS 1 LD
Alberto Carvalho, then the Los Angeles Unified School District superintendent, listens to parents of students at a Los Angeles high school on March 30, 2022. Carvalho resigned from his position Sunday night under the cloud of a failed AI chatbot initiative and an FBI investigation.
Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG
School & District Management Carvalho Resigns as L.A. Unified Superintendent Amid Federal Investigation
Alberto Carvalho has been under FBI investigation for four months after a failed AI chatbot venture.
Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times
6 min read
Los Angeles Schools Federal Raid 26059057494102
Alberto Carvalho speaks about Los Angeles students' improved scores before Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation related to student literacy in Los Angeles on Oct. 9, 2025. The Los Angeles Unified superintendent, facing an FBI investigation, resigned June 21.
Damian Dovarganes/AP Photo
School & District Management Opinion Embrace the Struggle: How I Find Joy as an Educator
Many of the most meaningful moments in my career started with a difficult conversation.
4 min read
Positive and emotional interaction with a group of students. The struggle is part of the joy.
Vanessa Solis/Education Week + Canva