The president’s Jan. 29 order led to an outcry from tribal members, including parents and educators, who feared the proposal would harm tribal schools that in many cases offer the only educational option for families living on remote reservations. They also warned — in public hearings and formal legislative action — that Trump’s order threatened to undermine U.S. treaties with sovereign Indian nations and their rights to self-determination in education.

“They put our kids in boarding schools to ‘kill the Indian,’” said Michelle Beaudin, a member of the governing board for the Lac Courte Oreilles Tribe, referring to the federal government’s century-long Indian boarding school program to forcibly assimilate Native American youth.

The tribe runs an Ojibwe language immersion school in rural northwest Washington that Beaudin says has helped restore tribal identity and culture. She worried any diversion of funds because of Trump’s order would harm that effort.

“We’re working hard to get that language and tradition back again,” she said. “This is one more assault to take it away.”

Yet in late May, the agency that oversees schools on tribal lands, the Bureau of Indian Education, released preliminary details of a plan in response to Trump’s order that appears to bring much more modest changes than many anticipated. Citing the bureau’s history of poor academic outcomes and financial mismanagement, conservatives have long wanted to turn the BIE into a school voucher-style program.

The proposal, though, looks nothing like that. Instead of offering to pay for students to attend competing private, religious or charter schools, the BIE plans to give campuses the flexibility to offer additional services — like tutoring and after-school programs — that families can then pick for their kids.

In an email to The Hechinger Report/ICT, the BIE said it “structured the plan to ensure tribes retain a leading role in determining how educational choices are expanded for their students.”

The BIE enrolls nearly 44,000 students at 183 schools that it directly runs or oversees on reservations in nearly two dozen states.

About 8 percent of Native American students attend BIE schools; the vast majority attend traditional public schools. In his order, Trump set an April deadline for the bureau to come up with a plan for families to use federal funds at non-BIE schools — with it scheduled to go into effect this fall.

Sweeping government layoffs and budget cuts, meanwhile, decimated the BIE’s rank-and-file staff. The bureau didn’t hold virtual forums to discuss the executive order until mid-March, when nearly 800 parents, tribal leaders, agency educators and Native education advocates weighed in, many of them critical of the order.

[Related: Native Americans turn to charter schools to reclaim their kids’ education]

Yet in a letter to tribal leaders in late May, the BIE notified them of a plan that would offer a limited amount of choice for families, while potentially increasing funding for schools like Beaudin’s that are directly managed by tribes.

The letter included just one line on its school choice plan: The bureau proposed it would set aside up to $1.3 million that schools could spend on additional services for families to choose for their children. Those could include advanced or college courses, tutoring and after-school activities, according to the May 23 letter. It also mentions gathering more feedback before the next school year on new and strengthened college and career pathways for students.

“These options will allow parents to exercise a meaningful choice in their child’s education,” the BIE letter reads.

In March, the Department of Education had encouraged state leaders to take advantage of similar flexibility with federal funds under existing law.

Native American Schools: red stone building with sign "Havsupai School with tree and dry, red mountains in background

Courtesy Unite for Native Students

Havasupai Elementary, a Bureau of Indian Education school, is located in Supai village at the base of the Grand Canyon.