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One Nebraska system will require that parents sign permission slips for library books. A Texas system will divide its library into “juvenile,” “young adult” and “adult” sections, with parents choosing the “level” their child can access.
right. because we need to sexualize kids as early as possible and teach them to hate the USA -parents be damnedSounds like prison.
Schools are for students, not for parents.
Well, there's always the internet.
This seems a reasonable compromise, doesn’t it?One Nebraska system will require that parents sign permission slips for library books. A Texas system will divide its library into “juvenile,” “young adult” and “adult” sections, with parents choosing the “level” their child can access.
How is that “like a prison”?Sounds like prison.
Schools are for students, not for parents.
Well, there's always the internet.
hard to say exactly on the age stuff, but "age appropriate" is the guideline here in florida.This seems a reasonable compromise, doesn’t it?
Especially for schools that have a wide age range in the building?
The public high school here goes from 7-12 grade. One elementary school from 4-6
Wouldn’t it make sense that you wouldn’t necessarily want a 4th grader reading some materials more appropriate for 6th graders? Or 7th graders reading materials more appropriate for 11-12th graders?
Sounds more like parenting to me.Sounds like prison.
Schools are for students, not for parents.
Well, there's always the internet.
Granted, my only experience as a parent with public school has been preK and K…but they’d send home permission slips for movies if they had a PG rating.hard to say exactly on the age stuff, but "age appropriate" is the guideline here in florida.
Kids are minors, their parents need to know what they are being exposed to in school. It's a no brainer
The horror. When I was in school, the library shelves were color coded by grade level and you weren’t allowed to check out anything above your grade level. And there should be some parental oversight since the parents are financially liable for damaged or lost books and fines for late returns.One Nebraska system will require that parents sign permission slips for library books. A Texas system will divide its library into “juvenile,” “young adult” and “adult” sections, with parents choosing the “level” their child can access.
Gasp. The horror!The horror. When I was in school, the library shelves were color coded by grade level and you weren’t allowed to check out anything above your grade level. And there should be some parental oversight since the parents are financially liable for damaged or lost books and fines for late returns.
This seems a reasonable compromise, doesn’t it?
Especially for schools that have a wide age range in the building?
The public high school here goes from 7-12 grade. One elementary school from 4-6
Wouldn’t it make sense that you wouldn’t necessarily want a 4th grader reading some materials more appropriate for 6th graders? Or 7th graders reading materials more appropriate for 11-12th graders?
Yeah, it strikes me as rather "common sense". But I suppose the saying "common sense is not so common" would apply.It does to me. Our elementary schools typically run K-6. The library should be divided into age/grade appropriate materials. I see no issue with that.
Well, it makes sense to draw the line somewhere, dont’cha think? Let’s not teach them to hate the USA so much that they promote an insurrectional overthrow of the government, and the installation of an unelected dictator. Just a thought.. . . . . . and teach them to hate the USA -
Because that is what R's want...an America with only one mindset. #sadRepublican state repression is kicking into high gear.
"The start of the 2022-2023 school year will usher in a new era of education in some parts of America — one in which school librarians have less freedom to choose books and schoolchildren less ability to read books they find intriguing, experts say.
In the past two years, six states have passed laws that mandate parental involvement in reviewing books, making it easier for parents to remove books or restrict the texts available at school, according to a tally kept by nonprofit EveryLibrary. Five states are considering similar legislation. Typical of these is an Arizona bill, signed by Gov. Doug Ducey (R) in April, that requires districts to send parents who ask lists of the books their children check out, as well as to publish the titles of all library materials bought after Jan. 1. Policies are proliferating at the district level, too: One Nebraska system will require that parents sign permission slips for library books. A Texas system will divide its library into “juvenile,” “young adult” and “adult” sections, with parents choosing the “level” their child can access.
“This is a state-sponsored purging of ideas and identities that has no precedent in the United States of America,” said John Chrastka, EveryLibrary’s executive director. “We’re witnessing the silencing of stories and the suppressing of information [that will make] the next generation less able to function in society.”"
Ironically, this 18 year old has most informed and mature insight into the issue:
"...Lily Van Bergen, 18, who graduated from the Bedford system this spring, is worried. She said her hometown is largely White, Christian and conservative. She predicted parental supervision of reading will shrink students’ understanding of the world."
Link
right. because we need to sexualize kids as early as possible and teach them to hate the USA -parents be damned
Minors do not have unlimited rights to access whatever they want at the school library, nor are “librarians” given more authority then politicians to decide what content is appropriateRepublican state repression is kicking into high gear.
"The start of the 2022-2023 school year will usher in a new era of education in some parts of America — one in which school librarians have less freedom to choose books and schoolchildren less ability to read books they find intriguing, experts say.
In the past two years, six states have passed laws that mandate parental involvement in reviewing books, making it easier for parents to remove books or restrict the texts available at school, according to a tally kept by nonprofit EveryLibrary. Five states are considering similar legislation. Typical of these is an Arizona bill, signed by Gov. Doug Ducey (R) in April, that requires districts to send parents who ask lists of the books their children check out, as well as to publish the titles of all library materials bought after Jan. 1. Policies are proliferating at the district level, too: One Nebraska system will require that parents sign permission slips for library books. A Texas system will divide its library into “juvenile,” “young adult” and “adult” sections, with parents choosing the “level” their child can access.
“This is a state-sponsored purging of ideas and identities that has no precedent in the United States of America,” said John Chrastka, EveryLibrary’s executive director. “We’re witnessing the silencing of stories and the suppressing of information [that will make] the next generation less able to function in society.”"
Ironically, this 18 year old has most informed and mature insight into the issue:
"...Lily Van Bergen, 18, who graduated from the Bedford system this spring, is worried. She said her hometown is largely White, Christian and conservative. She predicted parental supervision of reading will shrink students’ understanding of the world."
Link
I get the impression you’d be happier in the ideological cage, you seem to roam the forum raging about one thing or another in ways that are neither ideologically consistent nor productive that occurred centuries ago.Tearfully sobbing about kids “learning to hate the US” and “being sexualized” because they are taught actual history instead of whitewashed garbage and aren’t taught that the blatant lie that LGBT people are “sinners” or doing something wrong horrifies conservatives.
Which is another reason you lot hate higher education; it enables kids to learn about the real world and their parents can’t keep them locked in an ideological cage.
I get the impression you’d be happier in the ideological cage, you seem to roam the forum raging about one thing or another in ways that are neither ideologically consistent nor productive that occurred centuries ago.
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