Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is making the curriculum culturally relevant for kids in east county. This is the kind of stuff they deal with so MCPS wants everyone to deal with it as well. MCPS will eventually force kids in west county to face it in real life once they institute busing. But for now, those kids will have to read about it in books.
Ok, Karen. As if alcoholism, drug use, and sex knew the beltway was the dividing line. It doesn’t. But you keep thinking your snowflake is so virginal and pristine, lol!
Anonymous wrote:I hear the Catholic schools have openings...
Anonymous wrote:During a recent 6th grade English class, a number of books were recommended for the kids to read including the following titles: Ghost by Jason Reynolds and The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas.
Reviews of the book online mention the following topics and words - a drunk father trying to kill a boy and his mom, a coach with a drug addict father, horny, grinding, use of condoms, gang shootings, drug dealers, lots of curse words, over 90 F*** and Sh**, Bit**, F*** THE POLICE
Are there any child psychologist reading this? Are these books appropriate for 11- and 12-year old’s?
https://www.commonsensemedia.org/book-reviews/the-hate-u-give
https://www.commonsensemedia.org/book-reviews/ghost-track-book-1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and they're hooking up (s*x and bjs) at Bethesda ES.
10 and 11 year olds are having sex. Sure.
So they can read about it just not do it. Makes perfect sense.![]()
+1
These books aren’t being assigned to 10 year olds, you dolt.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
As long as my kids read, I’m fine with their reading just about anything. And 6th graders already know about condoms, drugs and drinks. They have access to TV, the internet and they talk.
Well, yes, but this is a pretty lazy goal for the education of your children. Literature is meant to inspire, expose people to beautiful words and new ideas, etc. Schools of education now think that kids need to "relate" to everything. No, kids have been imagining themselves in other worlds and times for several centuries through literature. Why not choose books that elevate rather than degrade. And "just reading anything" is a pretty low standard.
I’ve read both if these books. Both are definitely inspirational and beautifully written. Based on the conversation here, perhaps they will also introduce new ideas. Personally, I would recommend Ghost for 6th. In fact, DD’s teacher read it as a read aloud in 5th. I would hold off on handing my kid The Hate U Give until 7th or 8th, but I’d let her read it as a 6th grader if she picked it up in her own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm just impressed they are recommending or offering books. We are in 6th and we haven't seen a book all year.
Our sixth graders are reading about Black Panthers in '68.![]()
Are they reading One Crazy Summer? That's a good book.
It is a good book. And the kids are enjoying it. I'm sure some people think it's to racy for them, though!![]()
Do they learn about the Black Panther involvement in the NY Brinks robbery and how the town’s first Black policeman was killed that day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm just impressed they are recommending or offering books. We are in 6th and we haven't seen a book all year.
Our sixth graders are reading about Black Panthers in '68.![]()
Are they reading One Crazy Summer? That's a good book.
It is a good book. And the kids are enjoying it. I'm sure some people think it's to racy for them, though!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as my kids read, I’m fine with their reading just about anything. And 6th graders already know about condoms, drugs and drinks. They have access to TV, the internet and they talk.
And this, my friend, is the parent of a future Q-Anon follower.
Nope. The exact opposite. The future Q-Anons are the ones with parents falling all over themselves to shield them from anything "other."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and they're hooking up (s*x and bjs) at Bethesda ES.
10 and 11 year olds are having sex. Sure.
So they can read about it just not do it. Makes perfect sense.![]()
+1
These books aren’t being assigned to 10 year olds, you dolt.
But it's okay for 11 year-olds? Wow, you're parent of the year, dolt. Or maybe a pedophile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and they're hooking up (s*x and bjs) at Bethesda ES.
10 and 11 year olds are having sex. Sure.
So they can read about it just not do it. Makes perfect sense.![]()
+1
These books aren’t being assigned to 10 year olds, you dolt.
But it's okay for 11 year-olds? Wow, you're parent of the year, dolt. Or maybe a pedophile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and they're hooking up (s*x and bjs) at Bethesda ES.
10 and 11 year olds are having sex. Sure.
So they can read about it just not do it. Makes perfect sense.![]()
+1
These books aren’t being assigned to 10 year olds, you dolt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and they're hooking up (s*x and bjs) at Bethesda ES.
10 and 11 year olds are having sex. Sure.
So they can read about it just not do it. Makes perfect sense.![]()
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and they're hooking up (s*x and bjs) at Bethesda ES.
10 and 11 year olds are having sex. Sure.
So they can read about it just not do it. Makes perfect sense.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and they're hooking up (s*x and bjs) at Bethesda ES.
10 and 11 year olds are having sex. Sure.
So they can read about it just not do it. Makes perfect sense.![]()