This tee shirt is hanging on my wall in my history classroom. I happened to win it at a history conference by spinning a wheel at the booth for the Reagan Library. I actually voted in this election and not for Reagan. He was not a favorite of mine, but being a history teacher, my classroom allows all different viewpoints to be discussed.
This poster hangs in my journalism classroom. There is nothing wrong with it. It simply promotes one world. It came from Teaching Tolerance, the educational branch of the Southern Poverty Law Center. They are now known as Learning for Justice and can be checked out here.
Anything wrong with either of these? No. There is not. My classroom exists for learning for everyone. I have some of the most diverse students I have ever had. Should they be exposed to everything I can expose them to? Absolutely.
I had a little accident at a conference last week in which I managed to break my patella. The students with me and the other advisor were so caring and concerned. I wanted for nothing the whole trip, even though I was on crutches and laid up most of the time. These are tough kids; ones who work one and sometimes two jobs, have parents they may not be so proud of, come from very rough neighborhoods and trust me. They feel safe in my presence. They expect me to be honest with them. They expect me to tell the truth about the world. They live in a tough society and they don't want sugarcoated.
When my district or my admins decide that I cannot hang on my walls, anything which may not be politically correct in their eyes, they had best not pull it off my walls or tell me to take it down. Shades of indoctrination. Isn't that what teachers are being accused of?
If you want your constituents to grow up even more angry and bitter, who will become voters because I was their teacher, will change the world because they want a better one for their children, keep going on this war against teachers. In the end, you will lose and the students will win.
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