糖心动漫vlog

English Learners Q&A

鈥楽till Connected': How This School Supports a Student in Immigration Detention

By Ileana Najarro 鈥 September 22, 2025 4 min read
Eric Marquez, a global history teacher at ELLIS Preparatory Academy, stands for a portrait at Ewen Park in the Marble Hill neighborhood of New York City on Sept. 18, 2025.
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Earlier this year, immigration officers detained 20-year-old Dylan Lopez Contreras at a routine court date in New York.

At the time, Contreras was a freshman at the city鈥檚 English Language Learners and International Support Preparatory Academy, or ELLIS Prep, where students ages 16 and older can complete a high school education after entering the United States with limited or interrupted formal schooling.

Contreras, originally from Venezuela, remains at a Pennsylvania detention facility, as . Advocates say his arrest in late May was part of a nationwide effort from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, to detain individuals at routine court hearings. Contreras had entered the U.S. border under a Biden-era entry program and was seeking asylum.

On May 6, the Department of Homeland Security issued a statement saying it 鈥渞escinded the Biden Administration鈥檚 guidelines for ICE actions that thwarted law enforcement from carrying out immigration enforcement arrests in courthouses and emboldened criminal illegal aliens.鈥

Eric Marquez, a history teacher at ELLIS Prep who taught U.S. history to Contreras last school year, spoke with Education Week about what it鈥檚 been like to teach immigrant students when a classmate is detained by immigration officers, and what teachers can do to help assuage students鈥 fears.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

What was Dylan Lopez Contreras like as a student?

I would say that he did not speak a lot, even in Spanish. He was a little more contemplative.

He was already supporting his mother with his siblings. You could see right away that he was a compassionate person. He created a new Uno game that kids would play every day at lunch. There would never be any need to say, 鈥楧ylan, can you have a seat?鈥 or 鈥楧ylan, attention please.鈥 Especially at his age, and what [he鈥檚] been through, he just kind of was ready to study.

[After he was detained,] we had a letter-writing campaign that sent something like 140 letters, individually stamped and handwritten, by students talking about their feelings about what Dylan was going through, giving him well wishes.

We just heard back from him recently ... he is still connected to us, even now. In August, he sent a note through his mother, and it came out not only to us, but to other schools that had supported him.

One of his responses [in Spanish] was, 鈥業鈥檓 sorry, I don鈥檛 really understand the English letters very much. But I want to say thank you to all my 颈苍驳濒茅蝉-丑补产濒补苍迟别蝉.鈥

What kind of advocacy work is the school engaged in for Dylan鈥檚 release?

Dylan鈥檚 mother called the school and the [9th grade] counselor immediately. She said, 鈥業 don鈥檛 understand what鈥檚 happening. They鈥檙e taking him away. They just said his case was dismissed or something.鈥

[The counselor] and a number of others from my school, and individuals from the community [provided Dylan with] legal connections who are willing to do some pro bono work.

Another teacher at our school created a GoFundMe page that brought in something like $43,000 [because Dylan鈥檚 mother] has had a rough time without her child, who was one of the breadwinners of the family. There were protests on the steps of the downtown courthouse. Recently, some of our advocacy has been with media outreach.

How are Dylan鈥檚 classmates handling the news now that we鈥檙e at the start of a new school year?

The kids are resilient in a way that, at least, they seem more resilient than even the adults sometimes.

If it鈥檚 brought up, or if there is some update, they鈥檙e asking teachers and each other. They are an oddly gentle class of 70 or 80 students who are not rude, who are respectful of authority, but also curious and willing to push back on it. They take care of each other, and they express their need for us.

They reach out to [Dylan鈥檚 mother] through WhatsApp.

They are the ones helping me. They show me pictures that they鈥檝e gotten through his mom of him in Venezuela, before he even left. He has sayings that he will tell the kids. And it鈥檚 kind of like he鈥檚 a wise man doing a fast or a monk because he remains just so humble and hopeful. We鈥檙e then unbelievably hopeful. So, when it comes to how my kids are doing, they are hopeful from the brilliance that Dylan continues to shine.

How do you feel as an educator trying to navigate moving forward with a missing student?

I get a pang in my heart when I hear you say the word missing, almost like desaparecidos, like disappeared people. It really is.

It is the first time that I鈥檝e dealt with this directly, in terms of seeing it in my face and hearing updates by the moment from the counselor, and having meetings about it. Dylan [was] taken outside of the school where we couldn鈥檛 even feasibly protect him. You trusted that the scheduled hearing was a safe space.

What advice do you have for teachers across the country with students fearful of immigration arrests?

On a personal level, I have an open-door policy. I have this sign-in sheet where people can talk about whatever they want.

Eric Marquez, a global history teacher at ELLIS Preparatory Academy, stands for a portrait at Ewen Park in the Marble Hill neighborhood of New York City on Sept. 18, 2025.

If it鈥檚 an English-as-a-second-language student or undocumented student in a general population, and they don鈥檛 necessarily communicate well with the teacher because of a lack of English, get to know the kid. I鈥檝e seen far too many of our type of students, our kids, isolated, where the teachers don鈥檛 really reach out or don鈥檛 know how to necessarily.

Compassion is number one. Number two is, be as transparent as possible when it comes to parents and as protective as possible when it comes to students.

Our kids still come to school despite their fear, because [parents] can depend on their child鈥檚 safety at our school. They know they鈥檒l get a good education. They know they鈥檒l be cared for like family.

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