Morgan Craven, J.D., is IDRA’s National Director of Policy, Advocacy and Community Engagement. She supports the integration and coordination of national and state policy reform efforts impacting school finance, school discipline and safety, education for emergent bilingual students, preparation and access to higher education, and community-led, culturally-sustaining schools.
In addition to crafting community-centered policy positions and advocacy strategies, Morgan spearheads IDRA’s critical work to expand access to policymaking spaces for impacted communities, particularly for students and families of color, families with limited incomes, and recent immigrant populations. She presented expert testimony in a hearing by the U.S. House Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education Subcommittee on banning corporal punishment. She also provided invited expert testimony on school safety before the U.S. Congressional Children’s Caucus in its listening session on federal relief for children, teachers and parents in Uvalde. In 2024, she developed IDRA’s A Policy Agenda to Support Black Students.
Morgan received a bachelor’s degree in International Relations from Stanford University, with a secondary focus in African and African American Studies. She received a law degree from Harvard Law School.
Previously, Morgan directed Texas Appleseed’s School-to-Prison Pipeline Project. In that role, she led and supported local- and statewide campaigns to address the practices and systems that push young people out of school and into the justice system. She has presented research and data to policymakers, collaborated with community-based, state, and national advocacy organizations, and developed policies related to school discipline, school policing, and school climate.
Prior to her work at Texas Appleseed, Morgan served as a briefing attorney for Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson at the Supreme Court of Texas and as a staff attorney at Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, where she represented students with disabilities in school discipline and court cases, and individuals and families in housing and public benefits cases.
Media featuring Morgan Craven
Commentary: It’s past time for corporal punishment to end in schools, Morgan Craven, San Antonio Express-News, October 6, 2023
Lawmakers across U.S. push for harsher school discipline as safety fears rise, by Patrick Wall, Chalkbeat, March 28, 2023
Mississippi Used Corporal Punishment in Schools 4,300 Times Last Year, by Julia James, Mississipi Today, February 10, 2023
School police forces are common in Texas and Florida. Is Boston next?, Abby Patkin, Boston Globe, January 23, 2023
Civil Rights community details Education Landscape in 2023, Insight News, January 19, 2023
Discussing the Use of Corporal Punishment in K-12 Schools, NEPC Talks Education podcast, April 28, 2022
‘Critical race theory’ is latest lightning rod in Texas, Bill Whitaker, commentary, Waco Tribune-Herald, June 19, 2021
Historians, parents say Texas bill limiting instruction about race and current events hurt, by Gabriela Vidal, CBS Austin, May 21, 2021
Critical Race Theory Ban in Classrooms Approved by Senate Committee, Stripped of Democrat Changes, by Isiah Mitchell, The Texan, May 19, 2021
San Antonio Declares Racism A Public Health Crisis, Some Find Proclamation Divisive, by Joey Palacios, Texas Public Radio, August 21, 2020
Eradicating the School-to-Prison Pipeline through a Comprehensive Approach to School Equity, Arkansas Law Review, by Morgan Craven, J.D., Paula Johnson, Ph.D., & Terrence Wilson, J.D.
Is the Texas Legislature doing enough for English learners in HB 3?, Julie Chang, Austin American-Statesman, April 19, 2019
How The Texas House School Finance Bill Could Shortchange Many Children Learning English, Laura Isensee, Houston Public Media, April 3, 2019
Amid School Finance Overhaul, Educators Say Funding for Programs That Teach English Won’t Benefit – Though one-fifth of Texas public school students are English learners, funding levels have remained the same since the 1980s, Laura Isensee, Texas Standard, April 3, 2019, 9:33 am
Bill targets Texas charter school admissions, Julie Chang, Austin American-Statesman, March 21, 2019
Parents worry students struggling with STAAR test won’t graduate, Alyssa Goard, KXAN Austin, March 20, 2019
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Writings
- IDRA and Partners Successfully Protect Access to Diverse and Rigorous Coursework, August 14, 2024
- Youth-Centered Programs Help to Bridge the Digital Divide in Underserved Communities, August 14, 2024
- Navigating Policy Landscapes for Linguistic and Cultural Equity, April 30, 2024
- Where Some Policymakers and School Leaders Get School Safety Wrong, March 27, 2024
- Support the Protecting our Students in Schools Act – Why the Federal Government Must Act Now to End Corporal Punishment, October 27, 2023
- Federal Departments of Education and Justice Release Discipline Resources for Schools, August 30, 2023
- Advancing Our Vision for U.S. Public Schools & Students – IDRA Federal Policy Priorities, January 27, 2023
- NAEP Scores Reveal Ongoing Inequities and New Questions about Approaches to COVID-19 Learning Recovery, December 15, 2022
- Federal Student Loan Changes Meant to Address Debt Crisis, September 02, 2022
- The Facts about School-based Police, July 29, 2022
- A Policy Roadmap – School Safety for All Students, July 29, 2022
- IDRA’s Core Principles Influence Federal Advocacy, May 30, 2022
- Southern School Censorship News Round-up, March 03, 2022
- New Advocacy Guide Shares Tips and Lessons from Classroom Censorship Fight, February 28, 2022
- Reflections on my Grandparents, February 02, 2022
- Communities List their Priorities for Federal Funds to Build Supportive Schools, December 16, 2021
- Stop the Bad; Do the Good – Hurting and Excluding Students Feeds the School-to-Prison Pipeline, September 29, 2021
- Expansive Classroom Censorship Bill Filed in Florida, September 17, 2021
- Federal Education Policy News – What Educators Need to Know, August 06, 2021
- The Case for Alternate Assessments and Community Oversight, April 30, 2021
- Federal Education Policy Update, January 21, 2021
- A&M-Commerce Partners with IDRA in Groundbreaking Collaboration, December 22, 2020
- Legislative Sessions Constrained by COVID-19 Must Not Exclude Community Participation, September 30, 2020
- The Policing of Black People Begins in Schools, September 30, 2020
- COVID-19 Federal Guidance Documents Impact Schools and Communities, June 12, 2020
- U.S. Department of Education Affirms Intent to Exclude Undocumented Students from CARES Act Relief Funds, June 12, 2020
- COVID-19 Does Not Change Civil Rights Protections for Students, May 15, 2020
- COVID-19 Worsens Systemic Educational Inequity, May 08, 2020
- Family and Community Input Needed for COVID-19 Relief Funds, May 01, 2020
- U.S. Department of Education Announces Rules for Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Funding, April 24, 2020
- Public School Advocates Join Forces to Push for Emergency Funding Equity, April 24, 2020
- Update: The CARES Act and Federal COVID-19 Actions, April 17, 2020
- An Overview of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act, March 27, 2020
- Testing for Students in Texas & Equity Implications, March 21, 2020
- President’s Proposed Federal Budget Would Cut Education Funding and Programs, March 18, 2020
- Watching the Courts as They Consider the Next Voucher Case, March 18, 2020
- How Schools Can End Harmful Discipline Practices, February 26, 2020
- Accountability Measures Set to Respond to Public Pressure, July 30, 2019
- New Discipline and Safety Policies for Texas, July 25, 2019
- College Access Legislation Increases Transparency and Adds Funds to TEXAS Grant Program, July 25, 2019
- Education Impact of Supreme Court Decision on Citizenship Question, July 25, 2019
- Texas Legislature Concentrates on School Funding, July 25, 2019
- Current Proposals for Texas’ Investment in English Learners Still Not Enough, April 30, 2019
- Federal School Safety Commission Recommendations Could Lead to Less Safe Schools, April 08, 2019
- Discipline Policies Must Not Come at the Expense of Any Group of Students, April 08, 2019
Podcasts
- The Law in Education – Gun Free Schools Act – Classnotes Podcast 244, September 16, 2024
- Advocates of Color and Community Power – Podcast Episode 236, August 31, 2023
- The Good, Bad and Ugly of Legislative Advocacy – Podcast Episode 234, July 16, 2023
- The Law in Education – Brown v Board of Ed – Podcast Episode 223, May 16, 2022
- The Future of Education Advocacy and Being Pushy – Podcast Episode 217, December 30, 2021
- Education Policy Fellows Get Things Done in the Suppression Session – Podcast Episode 216, December 13, 2021
- An Inside Look at Advocating with Communities of Color – Podcast Episode 215, November 29, 2021
- Education Advocacy Hinges on Community Collaboration – Podcast Episode 214, November 19, 2021
- How Equity Audits Reveal Harmful Education Policies – Podcast Episode 202, June 23, 2020
- Most Recent Fights for Fair Funding of Texas Schools – Podcast Episode 197, October 23, 2019
- Quick History School Finance in Texas – Podcast Episode 196, October 11, 2019
- Impact of Mass Shootings on Schools – Podcast Episode 195, September 01, 2019