Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m AA and a social studies teacher in MCPS. What the teacher did was inappropriate and insensitive. It also seems very random. I’m really curious about what district and school this lesson occurred in. Segregation is not part of the K curriculum in MCPS and I can’t find it in the state standards either.
OP Here. This occurred in MCPS in one of the language immersion programs. I need to find out more details but I think it was part of a discussion about Martin Luther King, JR. Good point about the curriculum. I will look into that.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with pp that the very fact the teacher was doing this lesson means she was trying to teach students not to be racist. However you choose to approach her, please assume she did this with goodwill and start from a place where you two agree on the important goal of teaching about racism. I would just mention that she might want to do it using shirts or something in the future to make it less uncomfortable for black children. If the teacher was white (everyone seems to assume this but we don’t know), I expect she will be mortified that it was received that way.
Be nice, people. The odds that a kindergarten teacher is a giant a$$hole are low.
Anonymous wrote:I’m AA and a social studies teacher in MCPS. What the teacher did was inappropriate and insensitive. It also seems very random. I’m really curious about what district and school this lesson occurred in. Segregation is not part of the K curriculum in MCPS and I can’t find it in the state standards either.
Anonymous wrote:I’m AA and a social studies teacher in MCPS. What the teacher did was inappropriate and insensitive. It also seems very random. I’m really curious about what district and school this lesson occurred in. Segregation is not part of the K curriculum in MCPS and I can’t find it in the state standards either.
Anonymous wrote:My son’s kindergarten teacher taught a lesson on segregation a few weeks ago where she built a bus and had the children sit in the order of their skin complexion to demonstrate segregation. The only reason I knew this is she posted a picture online for parents in the classroom to see. When I first saw the picture it did not sit right with me. I talked to my son about it and explained yes as an African American there was a time where he would sit in the back but things have changed. Most recently my son has brought it back up and on a few occasions with extended family has said where they would sit on the bus based on their skin complexion. This really bothers me and I am thinking of talking to the principal. Thoughts? Am I making too much of a big deal?
Anonymous wrote:Totally insensitive. This reminds me of this - story about field trip to pick cotton:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PToqVW4n86U
I’m the PP poster. I meant to type I’m a black woman with biracial children. Stupid autocorrect!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the teacher meant well, was trying to come from a good place. I think it falls under the category of poor judgment because the kids are young. I remember when my child's K teacher read a story to the class about the civil rights movement and talked to the kids about the police using dogs attack black people. My child was very disturbed by this image and I believed that the teacher should have chosen a book that was age appropriate.
Yes.
What she probably should have done was shirt colors, or something else, or really saved the lesson plan for an older age.
Anonymous wrote:I think the teacher meant well, was trying to come from a good place. I think it falls under the category of poor judgment because the kids are young. I remember when my child's K teacher read a story to the class about the civil rights movement and talked to the kids about the police using dogs attack black people. My child was very disturbed by this image and I believed that the teacher should have chosen a book that was age appropriate.