Most educators and parents would agree that school needs to be a safe place if children are to successfully learn. However, what that safe place looks like has become a topic of controversy for one Michigan school district. On the one hand, a teacher is being applauded for standing up for homosexual students. On the other hand, that same teacher is being accused of bullying students who voiced their own views on anti-homosexuality based on their religion. Which stand is correct? The verdict is still out.
In 2026, debates surrounding student speech, religious expression, LGBTQ+ protections, and school safety policies continue to play out in school districts across the country. Public schools are still navigating how to balance student rights in public school with anti-bullying policies and inclusive learning environments.
The Howell Controversy
In a high school about 45 miles northwest of Detroit, a school teacher asked one of his economics students to remove a belt buckle that featured the Confederate flag. The teacher, Jay McDowell, explained that the symbol could be offensive to some of the students in the class. The student readily complied with the request, but the exchange sparked a discussion among other students and the teacher that resulted in two students being asked to leave the classroom.
The first student, 16-year-old Daniel Glowacki, asked McDowell to explain the difference between the Confederate flag and the rainbow flag that serves as a symbol of pride for the gay community. At the time, McDowell
