Christina Greer, an associate professor of political science at Fordham University, said the order came as no surprise.

“As a candidate, he said there was radical indoctrination of students,” she said. “He’s making sure to frighten students and educators across the country so they can’t teach the real history of the United States.”

It was not clear how the order issued on Wednesday would affect how the history of race relations is taught in Americans schools. During his inaugural address last week, Trump criticised education that “teaches our children to be ashamed of themselves — in many cases, to hate our country”.

SCHOOL CHOICE

The first order also directs the US Department of Education to prioritise federal funding for school choice programs, a longstanding goal for conservatives who say public schools are failing to meet academic standards while pushing liberal ideas.

Many Democrats and teachers’ unions, on the other hand, say school choice undermines the public system that educates 50 million US children.

Federal test scores released by the National Assessment of Educational Progress on Wednesday underscored the challenge faced by educators in the wake of widespread learning loss during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The scores showed that one-third of eighth graders tested below NAEP’s “basic” reading level, the most in the test’s three-decade history, while some 40 per cent of fourth-graders also fell below that basic threshold.

That executive order also directs US states on how they could use block grants to support alternatives to public education, such as private and religious schools.

US education is primarily funded via states and local taxes, with federal sources accounting for about 14 per cent of the funding of public K-12 schools, according to Census data.

Trump’s order could affect some US$30 billion to US$40 billion in federal grants, estimated Frederick Hess, an education expert at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute.

“This stuff is directionally significant,” said Hess, adding that Trump’s directive represented “the most emphatic support for school choice we’ve ever seen at the federal level”.

The first order also calls for allowing military families to use Pentagon funds to send their children to the school of their choosing. It also mandates that Native American families with students in the Bureau of Indian Education be allowed to use federal funds in selecting their schools.

A number of Republican-leaning states have in recent years adopted universal or near-universal school choice policies, paving the way for vouchers or other methods that allocate taxpayer funds for homeschooling or private tuition.

Josh Cowen, a professor of education policy at Michigan State University, said that Trump’s executive order is aimed at sending “an aggressive statement about his position on vouchers” even if his power to reallocate funds is limited.

Cowen said the bigger potential financial impact on education lies with a bill reintroduced in Congress this week that would create a federal school voucher program with an estimated US$10 billion in annual tax credits.

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