Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get ready for when your kid reads Huck Finn or Tom Sawyer!
They have sanitized versions of both books now
How unfortunate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get ready for when your kid reads Huck Finn or Tom Sawyer!
They have sanitized versions of both books now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh…. The teacher?
Teacher picked book. And I don’t have that type of relationship with teacher / school admin
If you don’t have a relationship with the teacher, start one. That’s on you. Do you want the teacher to discuss the offensive word in class or do you just want the teacher to be punished and to make a big public stink about it? ALWAYS talk to the teacher first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh…. The teacher?
Teacher picked book. And I don’t have that type of relationship with teacher / school admin
Time to establish 5hat kind of relationship. If you have concerns you need to be assertive about expressing them so you can participate in your child’s education.
I can’t fathom a teacher not addressing that language in the context of a discussion, but stranger 5hings have happened, so ASK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get ready for when your kid reads Huck Finn or Tom Sawyer!
They have sanitized versions of both books now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh…. The teacher?
Teacher picked book. And I don’t have that type of relationship with teacher / school admin
Anonymous wrote:Get ready for when your kid reads Huck Finn or Tom Sawyer!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Use it as a teaching moment to your kid. Tell them about the word.
This. They're going to encounter other words in their life, be it in books or elsewhere. Good time to parent and explain them.
Anonymous wrote:Use it as a teaching moment to your kid. Tell them about the word.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also- why can’t you say something to your kid about it? Maybe have him bring it up in class. “My mom and I were talking about how that isn’t a nice word…”
np Do you live in the real world? Books are supposed to show how we actually live. If you haven't already noticed people aren't always nice. Why would you expect authors not to write what actually happens? Perhaps kids who do use those words there can be a discussion of how "not nice" they are. Censorship is not the answer. I suppose you wouldn't want your kid to read Huck Finn or Tom Sawyer, eh?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh…. The teacher?
Teacher picked book. And I don’t have that type of relationship with teacher / school admin