North Texas school board rejects prayer period, defends students' existing liberties
On December 9, a North Texas school board formally pushed back on a state-approved initiative to structure student prayer into the school day—and they did it unanimously.
The Denton Independent School District board of trustees voted against adopting the prayer period option allowed under Texas Senate Bill 11, arguing that such a move would actually limit, not enlarge, students’ rights to express their faith in school, as The Christian Post reports.
SB 11, passed earlier this year with bipartisan support, requires all public school boards across the state to vote by March 2026 on whether to authorize specific prayer or religious study periods during the school day.
Board Rejects Regulation In Favor Of Freedom
Denton ISD made its stance crystal clear: existing law already protects students' ability to pray voluntarily, read scripture, and express religious viewpoints during non-disruptive times at school.
Echoing that sentiment, the board stated that implementing SB 11's prayer policy would add burdensome restrictions and cause confusion over freedoms that are already well-established under both state and federal law.
The legal complexities behind the bill weren’t lost on the board either. Their legal counsel, Deron Robinson, advised against adopting the policy, citing it could unintentionally curtail student freedoms rather than broaden them.
Legal Concerns Raise Red Flags
Robinson warned the law’s structure is rigid and fraught with consequences. “The policy is very explicit on how it has to look, and it would actually put very limiting factors around the times a student could pray, could read scripture,” he said.
He added bluntly, “It would essentially deprive students of a lot of the rights they currently have,” expressing concern that enforcing timeboxed prayer windows might lead to unintended constitutional challenges.
In other words, a law supposedly set up to invite more religious freedom could, ironically, regulate it right out of existence.
Mandatory Waivers Spark Additional Worries
Another sticking point is the legal baggage SB 11 carries. The policy would force students and staff to sign consent forms waiving certain constitutional rights—namely, the Establishment Clause protections of the First Amendment.
That’s not exactly small print. Under the new law, any public display of religious practice during the school day would be banned unless the right paperwork is signed, checked, and filed, removing the natural and spontaneous expression of faith currently protected by law.
Even simple acts like praying in front of peers would require prior consent if a district adopted the policy. Denton ISD decided that was a line not worth crossing.
Opt-Out Does Not Mean Anti-Prayer
Critics of the board’s decision may try to paint it as anti-religious, but the district preempted that narrative: “Declining SB 11 doesn’t mean we’re against prayer. It means we’re for individual freedom and every student’s right to live out their beliefs without restriction or separation.”
That’s not an anti-faith position—it’s an anti-red tape one. The district didn’t reject spirituality; it rejected unnecessary bureaucracy.
Denton ISD becomes the second district in Texas to formally decline participation in SB 11. Lytle ISD, southwest of San Antonio, voted similarly in October, citing the importance of preserving students’ ability to exercise their faith freely and naturally.
Faith Doesn’t Need A Permission Slip
Lytle ISD’s rationale echoed Denton’s: prayer should not need a permission slip. With or without SB 11, students are already legally free to engage in voluntary religious activities during non-instructional times.
This measured resistance to overregulation of faith is bolstered by the recent legal saga over another religiously themed mandate, Senate Bill 10. That law, which requires the Ten Commandments to be displayed in every classroom, is currently under fire in the courts.
A federal judge recently issued an injunction forcing several school districts to remove those displays, highlighting the thin legal ice beneath such sweeping legislation.





