I am curious why you believe this event that happened a generation ago required “acknowledgement?” |
This is planned murder on a large scale in another country. Imagine if Germany nazi extremists attack the Royal palace in London and killed 2,000 people today with jets. And at same time other key buildings in London such as Canary Warf. And an attack targeting defenseless civilians |
I am aware of what happened during 9/11. It was very sad. I cried. I still don't think kids today need to have a moment of silence for the victims. |
+1. It's taught in US History classes now, as it should be. |
You are a nut job. |
| There’s a difference between being aware of history and forcing kids to re-live traumatic events to make you satisfied. |
Two parents complained that I took 10 minutes to acknowledge 9/11 and show an approved for MCPS grades 3-8 video. They hadn’t told their 11 year olds about 9/11 yet and were made that I did. I guess I’m supposed to pretend it didn’t exist, but Santa does. A decade ago, there were some Central office directives about teaching 9/11. It appeared in my curriculum. Not anymore. |
What class do you teach? I’d rather you teach the curriculum vs going off curriculum. More people died of Covid. Do you honor them? |
They really didn't but you were too busy fighting to notice. |
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There are no kids in high school who were alive when 9/11 happened. It belongs in the history books for them just as much as all the other horrible tragedies that happened before they were born.
Even kids now in college will have no memories of 9/11, because they were born the year it happened or the year after. I was deeply and personally affected by 9/11, but I think schools having announcements or whatever is performative, not meaningful. |
What school? My 11 year old picked up something from a class discussion and has been asking so many questions about 9/11 ever since. I was on the Hill on THE 9/11. It was scary and the aftermath once details came out was horrifying. But I cringed on 9/11/23 when I was on zoom meeting with colleagues and outside partners from abroad and someone suggested a moment of silence followed by their bizarre recount of where they were when it happened (dc, but nowhere near a target) and went on to encourage everyone to watch a documentary or read up on it…including people on the call from other countries. I don’t think 9/11 will ever be forgotten. It’s a tragedy that prompted wars that dragged on for decades and roped in countries around the world. It also changed the way everyone travels. But a moment of silence at schools isn’t necessary. It is performative. |