Despite struggling with a global developmental delay, six-year-old Rigoberto Contreras showed up at Michael S. Ryan Elementary in Laredo, Texas, dressed up in his kindergarten cap and gown, ready to graduate with his classmates. Sadly, his family says the school had him wait alone in an empty library. When the ceremony started, Rigoberto was kneeling at locked glass doors, staring in as his friends celebrated without him.
His dad caught the moment on video. In the viral video on X, Rigoberto’s mom can be heard saying, “He was shouting, ‘My friends! My friends!’ and the kids just waved at him.”
According to Rigoberto’s family, most of the kindergarten kids got to come inside at 7 a.m. for breakfast and some pre-ceremony fun. The school only let Rigoberto in at 9 a.m. – two hours late – and put him in the library, not with his class.
He has been diagnosed with global developmental delay, which can make things like speech and focus tough, but he isn’t in any formal special education program. Still, the family says no one at the school told them Rigoberto’s graduation would be any different. He arrived expecting what every other kindergartner got, and missed out.
The video, filmed by Rigoberto’s dad, shows him kneeling in his graduation outfit behind locked glass doors, watching his classmates celebrate inside. His mom, Adriana, told reporters, “It broke our hearts to see him not with his little friends.”
Rigoberto’s family is calling the Texas school’s actions discrimination. His aunt and godmother, Nallely Esquivel, says in the video: “They discriminated against him. It’s a strong word, but he didn’t give them a reason to exclude him that day.”
Internet Reacts to Texas School Allegedly Excluding 6-Year-Old From Kindergarten Graduation
The legal framing arrived alongside the heartbreak. “At that age, there is no way to comprehend why you are being rejected. This goes against the ADA laws,” one person wrote. Another kept it short: “Who would do that to a child? That’s unhinged.”
The permanence of the moment hit hardest in the replies. “Making a 6-year-old watch his own graduation through a locked glass door is cruel, full stop. Whatever excuse the school gives, that memory is going to stay with him,” one commenter wrote. A parent of a child with disabilities added, “This is heartbreaking. What should have happened is a discussion of how best to help him have a successful experience at graduation. Locking him out is unacceptable and discriminatory. As a mom of a profoundly disabled son, it is crushing when your child is isolated.”
Others focused on the adults involved. “Wicked adults are far worse than any young hyperactive child. They know better,” one person said. Another asked the question underneath everything: “Some adults thought this was the right thing to do?”
As of now, the Texas school in question hasn’t made any public statement about what happened. Their policy says LISD doesn’t discriminate based on handicap. Because Rigoberto wasn’t enrolled in special education, there was no Individualized Education Program or 504 plan, so it’s unclear what the school actually owed to him and whether the family was ever given options.
The Americans with Disabilities Act and Section 504 say schools can’t discriminate against students with disabilities in any program or event, even if there’s no formal plan in place. That includes graduation.







