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Nieninque
07-03-2008, 05:02 AM
US teacher is suspended for letting pupils read bestseller

http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,,2288658,00.html

Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington
Thursday July 3, 2008
The Guardian

An Indiana teacher who used a much lauded bestseller, The Freedom Writers Diary, to try to inspire under-performing high-school students has been suspended from her job without pay for 18 months.

The effective book ban by the school authorities in Perry Township has outraged teachers and education reformers.

The Writers Diary, a series of true stories written by inner-city teenagers, was put together by a teacher, Erin Gruwell, and has been celebrated as a model for transforming young lives. It was made into a film with Hilary Swank last year.

Connie Heermann, a teacher for 27 years, sought permission to introduce the book to her students last autumn after attending a training workshop held by the Freedom Writers Foundation. "If you read the whole book you will see how these inner-city students grow and change and become articulate, compassionate, educated young people who want to do something good in their lives despite the environment in which they were raised," she told the Guardian. "I thought my students would very much relate to those kids."

Her head agreed and Heermann got written permission from nearly 150 parents, but the Perry Meridian high school board urged her to wait for its decision.

Teachers' union officials say that a single board member objected to swearing in the book. The school board member allegedly persuaded the other six officials to ban Heermann from teaching the book. It remains available in school libraries.

Heermann and the union say there was no explicit ban on the book when she handed it out to pupils on November 15. But later that day she received an email from the board advising her not to teach the book. "That was the pivotal moment of my life, when I saw how my students were taken with the book, how they loved it, and then I am told not to let them read it? I said no," she said.

After being threatened with dismissal, Heermann was eventually suspended. The union is deciding whether to take the case to court.

The school board denies book banning and accuses Heermann of insubordination. Barbara Thompson, the school board president, wrote in an email yesterday: "She knew she had defied her supervisors' direction in her work and that her defiance was 'insubordination' and 'neglect of duty'."

Stretch
07-03-2008, 07:49 AM
She broke the rules. She should face the consequences.

She also didn't get permission from all the parents.

AnticorRifling
07-03-2008, 08:46 AM
I've been to that high school before. I have to agree with Stretch on this one. She didn't wait for the green light from the board. Both parties involved are dumb her for not waiting, them for being jackasses.

Skeeter
07-03-2008, 11:10 AM
You have to get written permission to read books now?

Gan
07-03-2008, 11:32 AM
A CNN video on the story - seems this started back in January of this year.

http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/us/2008/06/29/tuchman.in.banned.book.cnn

While I disagree with the suspension and if some articles are accurate the request for her resignation, I have to say that she should have waited until she was cleared. Those were the rules.

That being said - this smacks alot of whats wrong with public schools and how they are run by school boards instead of being run with direct oversight by a singular accountable individual. There are too much politics being subjected into the school system through school boards.

Its obvious that it reached the kids in the class (the banned book) - I see no reason why it should not have been allowed.

This reminds me of hearing that some schools/boards banned the Harry Potter books when they first became a hit - because of their 'witchcraft and wizardry'. My own school system (that I grew up in) tried to ban them - and many people at the public meeting laughed in their faces (my parents included) for being idiots.

Asile
07-03-2008, 11:38 AM
You have to get written permission to read books now?

I thought it was well-known these days that every teacher must have written permission from all parents/guardians of all students in the class to teach anything at all that is not directly taken from those sorry excuses of measurements of educational performance known as standardized tests (thankyouverymuch, No Child Left Behind).

My high school required all freshmen to attend a 4-week summer program, during which we read Toni Morrison's Sula, which is rather graphic and explicit to a point where if they ever made a movie directly from it, they would definitely have to hide a few things to keep it from getting an NC-17 rating. There were no permission slips sent home to parents before the books were handed out, and when one or two parents complained, they were told that if they wanted to keep their children from reading the book and learning how to have an intellectual discussion about it, they could pull the kids out of the school completely. (Gotta love magnet programs!) This was only 14 years ago, by the way.

I'm glad to see this teacher sticking to her guns on this. I haven't personally read The Writers Diary, so I can't say much on the book itself, but it seems that the teacher made her choice based on a considerable amount of information--she went to a workshop on how to teach it, for crying out loud!--rather than just grabbing some book off the shelf and saying, "Eh, this looks good enough." And better still, her students LIKED reading it; I always did better when I liked the books I was assigned to read, because I was excited about the whole process. (And those good books made up for the ones that were hell on earth.)

I really hope the teachers union does take this case to court. An 18-month suspension without pay for this is serious overkill, if the school board thought this teacher needed a reprimand. And too many students these days are merely being fed information to be regurgitated on the next test, instead of being taught how to think for themselves. What do they really think is going to happen, total anarchy?

No wonder the American educational system is becoming a joke.

Gan
07-03-2008, 11:52 AM
Having 3 members of my family that work in the public school system - I totally agree that the public school system is tutoring to the next test rather than teaching. They agree as well.