Are you asserting that parents should not have an opinion regarding the curriculum taught in their child’s school? |
Actually, yes. However, if you don't approve of your child learning about Trayvon Martin, you should have an option to have your child do something else. Sort of like sitting out sex ed topics. You sounds like segregationists in the 1950s. Sad that there are some of you that exist in what I thought of as a black-safe city like DC. |
So other people can’t have opinions in your world, Mr. Orwell? How 1984 of you. |
Those organizations aren’t controversy-free either. I want our school to promote and address social justice issues, I just don’t want it revolving around specific groups. |
Having an opinion is not the same as insisting a school not continue with a curriculum that your happen not to agree with. I’m sorry that you think it’s not appropriate for your kid to learn about police brutality and teaching my black son how to deal with police while being black in America. I feel Sri got that my son shouldn’t learn about white washed version of Columbus, but I am not entitled to think I have a say in the matter. Pssss your entitled privilege is showing. |
| *excuse typos |
You take a fair position but I will ask if they don't partner with the advocacy organizations, how will they (any school system, really) understand what to highlight in terms of continuing injustices/inequality? |
You said other people can’t have opinions. Are you walking that back? |
Sorry, let me be clear. Yes, of course you can have an opinion. No, you shouldn’t have any influence. |
+1. Some people obviously embrace the BLM movement. Others see it as intolerant and violent. Net net, it's not something that belongs in public schools. |
What specifically do you have an issue with as it relates to BLM in schools week? |
| NP here. As a white person with a kid at a JKLM school, I'm glad they are doing this. To me, the point of BLM in schools is to talk about racism TODAY and how it is still here, affecting the lives of millions of people. When I was in school, Black History Month focused on the achievements of the past - Rosa Parks, MLK, etc. and how they were successful. BLM week at our school is looking at how racism and prejudice exist and proliferate today. That's a very different message and an important one, especially for my white kid. |
Why? |
It would be a very long list, but frankly it's irrelevant. I shared earlier a recent survey showing how the majority of Americans view BLM in a negative light. That's all you need to know to realize that BLM is not the best anchor to discuss civil rights or black history in taxpayer-funded schools. But, hey, be my guest and do as you deem proper. Just don't pretend to be surprised (or blame institutional racism or whatever) when your own actions alienate allies and generate backlash and make things worse. |
Did you know that the majority of Americans saw the Civil Rights Movement in 1961 in a negative light? I think by a wider margin than BLM. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/04/19/black-lives-matters-and-americas-long-history-of-resisting-civil-rights-protesters/?utm_term=.5ee716c1d57d |