Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.
Everyone? I have two kids in elementary school who are early and precocious readers and never encountered them.
I have been having conversations with my fifth grader about critical and logical thinking, not automatically believing what he encounters online, conspiracy thinking, etc.
I may show these to him as an example of a propaganda publication.
Absolutely have your precocious 5th grader read them. They’re about accountability and personal responsibility. It will dovetail well with all your social justice victim themes you teach at home and at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.
Everyone? I have two kids in elementary school who are early and precocious readers and never encountered them.
I have been having conversations with my fifth grader about critical and logical thinking, not automatically believing what he encounters online, conspiracy thinking, etc.
I may show these to him as an example of a propaganda publication.
Absolutely have your precocious 5th grader read them. They’re about accountability and personal responsibility. It will dovetail well with all your social justice victim themes you teach at home and at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.
Everyone? I have two kids in elementary school who are early and precocious readers and never encountered them.
I have been having conversations with my fifth grader about critical and logical thinking, not automatically believing what he encounters online, conspiracy thinking, etc.
I may show these to him as an example of a propaganda publication.
Absolutely have your precocious 5th grader read them. They’re about accountability and personal responsibility. It will dovetail well with all your social justice victim themes you teach at home and at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.
Everyone? I have two kids in elementary school who are early and precocious readers and never encountered them.
I have been having conversations with my fifth grader about critical and logical thinking, not automatically believing what he encounters online, conspiracy thinking, etc.
I may show these to him as an example of a propaganda publication.
Absolutely have your precocious 5th grader read them. They’re about accountability and personal responsibility. It will dovetail well with all your social justice victim themes you teach at home and at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.
Everyone? I have two kids in elementary school who are early and precocious readers and never encountered them.
I have been having conversations with my fifth grader about critical and logical thinking, not automatically believing what he encounters online, conspiracy thinking, etc.
I may show these to him as an example of a propaganda publication.
Absolutely have your precocious 5th grader read them. They’re about accountability and personal responsibility. It will dovetail well with all your social justice victim themes you teach at home and at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.
Everyone? I have two kids in elementary school who are early and precocious readers and never encountered them.
I have been having conversations with my fifth grader about critical and logical thinking, not automatically believing what he encounters online, conspiracy thinking, etc.
I may show these to him as an example of a propaganda publication.
Anonymous wrote:This is literally political propaganda and brainwashing aimed at children:
https://www.instagram.com/tuttletwinstv?igsh=NGFldW44cXQ5YjAw
Do people actually sit their kids down and have them watch this ahistorical slop?
\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.
Everyone? I have two kids in elementary school who are early and precocious readers and never encountered them.
I have been having conversations with my fifth grader about critical and logical thinking, not automatically believing what he encounters online, conspiracy thinking, etc.
I may show these to him as an example of a propaganda publication.
Yeah I have an elementary schooler who loves history, but I've never seen or heard of these.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.
Everyone? I have two kids in elementary school who are early and precocious readers and never encountered them.
I have been having conversations with my fifth grader about critical and logical thinking, not automatically believing what he encounters online, conspiracy thinking, etc.
I may show these to him as an example of a propaganda publication.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone buys those books, even Georgetown Day School.