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Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
Reply to "Just got disturbing email regarding English class for my rising freshman"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I might ask for an alternate book just to avoid reading a novel in verse, which my kid hates as much as I do. I'm very left wing, but I'm actually a little disappointed that the schools are trending so hard away from reading the classics. I feel like kids will have lots of opportunities to read the controversial new lit-crit darling books. But when will they read The Grapes of Wrath, or The Crucible, Slaughterhouse Five, or Long Day's Journey Into Night, or anything by Hemingway or Wharton? (Seems like some of the classics, like Ray Bradbury, George Orwell and Toni Morrison continue to be popular among schools.) I subscribe to the "Make New Friends, But Keep the Old" theory of literature -- I feel like we are tossing out all the old friends. It would be easier to mix in the new ones if kids read 6 novels a year, but it seems like a lot of classes really only have 2-3, plus maybe some poems or short stories. [/quote] Have them read these classics on their own. This summer, my ninth grade child read [i]Scarlett Letter, As the Bell Tolls, [/i] and [i] The Crucible.[/i] Last summer, she read [i] Lord of the Flies, A Separate Peace, Old Man and the Sea, [/i] and [i]Of Mice and Men.[/i] She likes to shop the bookshelves in our family room, and she found most of these on our shelves. We only had to download one.[/quote] List. If you had such books around you would know the actual titles. Such as For Whom the Bell Tolls. Not to mention your dislike of “The.”[/quote] I am an engineer who reads, but I am not an aficionado of literature. My daughter's other parent is the literature lover. Yes, we have a rather expansive home library, but that doesn't mean everyone in this house, myself included, has read every title. If it, pathetically, makes you feel better about yourself, continue to judge others for errors they make. I am sorry that you never matured past the developmental age of approximately 12-13.[/quote] DP. But you were literally on here bragging about having an "expansive library" of "classics" in your house, and you went typing at us, aggressively, a list of "classics" you had your child read with this look-at-us-with-our-family-priority-of-classic-literature-reading bs and then you go typing out some weird incorrect title for For Whom the Bell Tolls. Which is a title virtually everyone knows, not just people with an "expanded library." So you got what you deserved there. --someone with a library that is probably significantly more "expansive" than yours. [/quote]
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