Rock'n Robin
Disney Queen
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2000
- Messages
- 7,810
One of my colleagues started teaching The Kite Runner to her students in 10th grade English. About 1/3 of the way through, she got called to the office. Someone had complained about a couple of the scenes in the book and she was forced to stop teaching it.
Now we do have a policy in place if a parent complains about a book--the student is given an alternative assignment to complete in the library. We designed this because of some "banning" problems about 10 years ago. But since this teacher did not get prior approval for the book, she accepted the administration's decree after some discussion. She does not know who complained--a parent, student, or possibly another teacher--and they won't tell her, which I understand.
The thing is, the students own the book--they paid for it--and now they are all reading it to see what the fuss is about (in fact I borrowed one of her extras and read it myself so I would know what was going on). Can you believe this, another staff member told a student today that they shouldn't even have it in the halls!
Since I've read it, I see that it is a good book (not my normal style but very readable). I see what the problem areas are too! But here is my question...if the teacher had gotten the book approved ahead of time, and passed out a rationale for teaching it to take home to parents, do you think it is an appropriate book for 10th graders? Would you think older kids should read it instead? Or should it be saved for college level readers?
BTW book banning drives me nuts. Since I started this job in 88 we have fought this battle with Ordinary People (the teacher lost) and Brave New World (the teacher won).
Robin M.
Now we do have a policy in place if a parent complains about a book--the student is given an alternative assignment to complete in the library. We designed this because of some "banning" problems about 10 years ago. But since this teacher did not get prior approval for the book, she accepted the administration's decree after some discussion. She does not know who complained--a parent, student, or possibly another teacher--and they won't tell her, which I understand.
The thing is, the students own the book--they paid for it--and now they are all reading it to see what the fuss is about (in fact I borrowed one of her extras and read it myself so I would know what was going on). Can you believe this, another staff member told a student today that they shouldn't even have it in the halls!
Since I've read it, I see that it is a good book (not my normal style but very readable). I see what the problem areas are too! But here is my question...if the teacher had gotten the book approved ahead of time, and passed out a rationale for teaching it to take home to parents, do you think it is an appropriate book for 10th graders? Would you think older kids should read it instead? Or should it be saved for college level readers?
BTW book banning drives me nuts. Since I started this job in 88 we have fought this battle with Ordinary People (the teacher lost) and Brave New World (the teacher won).
Robin M.