FL public school parents who believe school libraries & curriculum should be a place for all children to access information & ideas #FReadom#LetFloridaRead
We’ve heard you can raise hundreds of thousands of dollars selling tees 😉.
Now, we didn’t come up with any hypocritical slogans or use Zapf Chauncey font, but we think our designs are pretty awesome.
https://t.co/KF3aMYN9KH
“The vague and overly broad language of (the law) forces educators to self-censor, depriving students of a comprehensive education. This lawsuit is about preserving the right to learn and teach without political interference.”
https://t.co/ow76EGE1YI
Broward Schools received more than a dozen book objections (most on 4/23/24) that we just found out about through PRR.
We have documents showing at least four were reviewed and retained by committee last fall (in green box), but what about the others?
Nassau Schools continue to see new objections to many of the same titles that were returned via the settlement.
34 new objections have been added to the district's database- submitted either by 34 different Nassau residents or the work of one parent.
https://t.co/tGVOR36Juk
Florida's debate over children's books moves from schools to public libraries. That story, plus the latest on teacher pay, campus security, graduation rates and more, in today's @TB_Times Florida education news roundup.
https://t.co/sSj3A9OkAP
This is a horrible bill that seeks to make it easier to convert public schools to a charter school and give away the land and building to the charter. These are public lands, and once we lose them, we won’t get them back.
If you missed the two Florida screenings of the documentary, there will be a virtual screening of #BannedTogether streaming on 1/20/25.
You can register for tickets here:
https://t.co/Yxthf3PcC1
Blasted over comments at a Moms for Liberty event, a Florida school board chairperson resigns her leadership post. That story, plus the latest on university trustees, teacher certification and more, in today's @TB_Times Florida education news roundup.
https://t.co/Pw9qDwNsHj
“I wish, obviously, all kids were able to take an African American history class,” O’Connor said, “but you have to pivot if it’s not happening in schools.”
https://t.co/x5eYyv5IRV
“[S]chool libraries have long served as vehicles to expose students to a broad array of ideas…Second, messages conveyed in school library books are diverse & contradictory — not endorsed by the state, as government speech must be.”
https://t.co/Gzy8SfTxdr
“[N]o matter how much these book-banners try to shield their children from reality. Everyone eventually crashes into it.
The question is: Will they be equipped to handle it?”
https://t.co/RU3GnLvqfV
This is exactly the issue we face in the #Florida Keys. The "marketplace" will never provide a wide range of high quality education options here, such options are economically unfeasible, but continuing to divert funding away from public schools will impact their quality.
Clay County Schools just posted 61 objections for the month of December.
The image is a screenshot from the district’s database:
https://t.co/RcGPrR97Gp
“We in Florida rank first in book bans. We rank last in teacher pay. These are two benchmarks that we should be ashamed of, and state lawmakers need to do better and prioritize education in Florida” - Katie Hathaway, @psdduval
https://t.co/WJV1ilUuVQ
"Court simply fails to see how any reasonable person would view the contents of the school library (or any library for that matter) as the government’s endorsement of the views expressed in the books on the library’s shelves." @ecpsfl refuses to settle. https://t.co/cvPLilrksf
The presiding judge encouraged the Escambia school district to go to settlement and cautioned that they could be wasting taxpayer dollars if they pursue a judgement.
https://t.co/SjKHghuY4a
Florida removed details from public schools' sex ed curriculum. A coalition seeks to ensure the changes don't affect school libraries. That story, plus the latest on turnarounds, teacher unions and more, in today's @TB_Times Florida education news roundup.
https://t.co/JMHHqPMGIY
Hernando School Board Chair only wants book banners on book review committee. She wants to get rid of “Any human being, any adult that’s sitting on that board that says, ‘Leave it on the shelf,’ that’s the people I’m having a problem with.” #Florida https://t.co/H5TZzB2a3x
Florida refused to spend $12m to abide by a new federal law, so delayed KidCare for over a year for 42k kids; refuses to participate in Summer EBT which would alleviate summer hunger for kids w $259m in summer SNAP, bc it wld cost $13m
& yet they found $15m to ban books