Uproar and Banned Books

May be an image of text that says 'There is a reason some don't want students to read tough literature: stepping into someone else's shoes and seeing the world through oppressed or marginalized eyes changes your life. It creates empathy and better understanding and often... often...solidarity. @Piper4Missouri'

I recently watched the playback of a local school board meeting in my city.  It was cringy, to say the least, and to also use kid vernacular… cringe…cringy.  Parent after parent got up to the mic to criticize the curriculum.  They didn’t want their 16 year old babies to be subjected to a certain book in their honors English class.  These particular parents, the loud minority, continued their rants against teachers, against their children’s school district.  Not realizing that as they spoke vehmently against a story based in poverty, overcoming obstacles, abuse, and in the end, integrity, their own child was at home using their fake SnapChat account the parent didn’t realize they had.  Yes, your child too.  They were using fake apps and work arounds on their phones to hide pictures, bully, or look at something inappropriate that didn’t have any thematic, redeeming idea wrapped around it.  Instead of having hard conversations with their kids, they were out there bullying the school district.  These parents didn’t want any book, or lesson, or heaven forbid, another person who believed differently than them to influence their children and their conservative Christian ideals.  There is a new bill on the docket in Oklahoma threatening teachers.  Families can sue teachers personally if their Christian values are diminished in any way.  Vague and problematic. Sounds like these parents need to homeschool their kids or shell out the dough to send their children to private Christian schools because I was under the assumption that these were public schools.  And public schools take all the children.  We take our Muslim kids, our Afghan refugees; we accept our Buddhist, atheist, and gay students.  Public school welcomes our black, brown, indigenous people of color.  We provide a safe space in which to discuss hard life issues.  This is messy, human work.  Look around your own group.  Do you only socialize with people who identify as you?  Do you go to church with only people who look like you, believe like you, or behave like you?  Who are you regularly around that pushes your thinking, who challenges your privilege?  You will never grow otherwise, and if you pin your kid into that same box, they won’t either.  Walk a mile in another’s shoes through community, through literature, through life, and maybe you and your kids will have a little more empathy to the plight of others.  

Stillwater H.S. on Twitter: "TOTW - “Intelligence plus character-that is  the goal of true education.” -Martin Luther King Jr.  https://t.co/vwdb5rEZzk" / Twitter

As our kids grow, life is more edgy.  Why not allow them to submerse themselves in books that teach a moral lesson.  Let’s reflect: 

Anne Frank was a staple for me growing up, and it is still taught today.  Anne never realized her words would be published as she shared her most intimate thoughts with her diary during the Holocaust.  She kisses a boy for the first time, gets her period, talks about her boobs, and goes on a puberty journey all girls and boys go through.  

In a bigger worldview, we must teach hard history.  The Holocaust was a horrific, gut wrenching true event that needs to continue to be analyzed.  “How does a democratic country murder 6 million Jewish people, and how can we make sure that never happens again?”  

I love teaching about Maya Angelou and Jackie Robinson.  If kids do any research at all, they will be led to what happened to Maya when she was seven, and why she stopped speaking for five whole years.  Does that mean this amazing, and influential woman of character and strength should be taken out of our curriculum?  No way!  

The Outsiders has smoking, murder, gang fights… should that be taken out?  

Walter Dean Myers’ Monster has a glaringly accurate portrayal of what it is like to be charged as an adult and thrown into prison.  Should we take that out?  

And those are just a few examples of what is being taught every day in America as it should be.  

So to the screaming parents at all the board meetings, maybe you should be introspective.  The school system, the teachers, the administrators are not your enemy.  Books are not your enemy.  And to the Governor, senators, congressmen and women who want to pass legislation bullying teachers, our most noble profession, what are you going to do when there is no one left to bully, no one left to teach…what then?  

 

Katie

#untoldteachingtruths  #katiekinderfromokc  #professionaldevelopment  #tenaciousteachers  #oklaed  #teachertwitter 

How to get a snow day…

Oh, the elusive Oklahoma snow day.  How we need you sometimes!  I come from the generation of kids who had to watch the slow scroll of the television in hopes of seeing Broken Arrow Public Schools closed.  I remember Broken Bow closing before us, and I would be mad that their name was so close to ours because I was often duped by their closing.

The thing about Oklahoma is that Oklahoma weather is often drunk.  70 degrees in January on a Sunday.  65 on Monday, and a 100 percent chance of snow on a Wednesday.  We often feel all seasons inside one week any given week in any given month.

A snow day is magical as a kid, as an adult, as an exhausted educator in February.   So, superintendents, if you are reading this, don’t just make the day virtual.  Let them binge watch movies, and go outside to make a snowman or go sledding or have a snowball fight.

My mom, a long time educator, still worked her booty off on a snow day.  We layered up and went on our merry way.  When we came back, hot chocolate was ready; lunch was ready; the snuggly fire place was ready.  We went back out and in and out and in 58 times in a snow day.  She just dried the clothes and made the food and read her book.  Love you, mom.  Thank you.

So, I tell my students the scientific way to get a snow day.  It works every time; everyone must participate.  Here is the catch; snow must be predicted in the forecast for it to work.  Don’t try the following in August and expect the snow.  🙂

  1. Put your pajamas on backward.
  2. Get as many ice cubes from the freezer as you want inches in snow.  6 inches is a good amount.
  3. Go into the bathroom; put the ice cubes in the toilet.
  4. At the same time you flush, you must yell into the toilet “SNOW DAY!”  It works every time.  My own kids will be performing the ritual tonight in hopes of that elusive magic happening tomorrow, and if we are lucky, Thursday too.  So, don’t ruin it.  Before bed, you know what to do.  SNOW DAY! | Snow day, I love winter, SnowKatie 🙂  #katiekinderfromokc  #untoldteachingtruths  #relatetheneducate  #kidsdeserveit  #oklaed