Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is great. Think about what this is teaching you girls (and boys) about relationships. Adolescents do not have fully matured.... anything!
I would never choose to read this crap- ever. Why would I want my child to read it.
I agree.
And frankly, given the fact that many kids are being raised in a single parent home (or sometimes not even that) and without proper family values, I think there's real value in doing the total opposite and going back to classical literature with strong family values so that all kids have the chance to understand what a family is supposed to look and feel like, and how relationships are supposed to work. Assigned reading in class is the only chance that a lot of kids in this country would get to have awareness of real family and relationship values. It's appalling that we're taking that away from them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know where to access the full reading list? I'm thinking of spending the summer reading these controversial books.
Let's have a book club!
There's an entire group of parents in LCPS who are protesting dozens of books, particularly many of those included in the diversity libraries that were purchased a few years back. These two titles just happen to be their latest source of outrage. When the pandemic hit, they switched to being angry that the schools were closed. Now they're back to books and CRT and masks on kids. The groups don't overlap entirely, of course, but you see the same people at every meeting.
Anonymous wrote:
This is great. Think about what this is teaching your girls (and boys) about relationships. Adolescents do not have fully matured.... anything!
I would never choose to read this crap- ever. Why would I want my child to read it.
You do realize Monday’s Not Coming is based on a couple of actual cases. So I’m happy that your kids can just read about these things. Some kids are experiencing them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know where to access the full reading list? I'm thinking of spending the summer reading these controversial books.
Let's have a book club!
Anonymous wrote:This is great. Think about what this is teaching you girls (and boys) about relationships. Adolescents do not have fully matured.... anything!
I would never choose to read this crap- ever. Why would I want my child to read it.
Anonymous wrote:So... it is not all fine for everyone, but it sounds like that is why there is choice. E.g., my DC was good with Harbor Me but had nightmares for a few weeks after Bud Not Buddy. That was before MS but is a good example. Watership Down: ok. Curious Incident of the Dog in Nighttime: meltdowns. And no, the meltdowns are NOT character building... they are just hard. Great for most kids to read what they want... also great to have options for others maybe less mature in that way.
Anonymous wrote:This is great. Think about what this is teaching you girls (and boys) about relationships. Adolescents do not have fully matured.... anything!
I would never choose to read this crap- ever. Why would I want my child to read it.