JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Duval County Public Schools is in the process of reviewing all material in classroom libraries to stay compliant with a new state law signed by the governor last year under House Bill 1467. Some teachers said they’ve been told to temporarily pack up their books until they can be certified.
Yay. Let's just take all actual thinking out of schools.
ReplyDeleteOK groomer....
DeleteAllowing that you are simply unknowing, the fact then is you are ignorant. The question then becomes is it that you are wilfully ignorant?
DeletePrecisely, how is it that you seem ignorant to the inroads of CRT, normalization of deviant behaviors; with emphasis on sexuality; overt sexualization of minors; and rampant homosexual tenents in the scools?
Answer please.
"[T]he law which says they can’t have, 'Any book, pamphlet, magazine or printed matter that contains explicit and detailed descriptions or narrative accounts of sexual excitement, or sexual conduct that is harmful to minors.'"
ReplyDeleteThis threatens "educators"? How?
I wonder how picky they're going to get about sexual excitement. For instance if in a book a boy asks a girl out for a date and when she accepts his hair gets stiff (Like in a comical way) is THAT considered sexual excitement? Otherwise I'd say keep ALL sex except for biology class out of elementary school. Sexual positions don't need to be discussed in biology class, nor do sexual preferences...
DeleteWell because without that material its much harder for teachers to mold children into good little sexual deviants they can use in their sex games.
DeleteExile1981
When I was a teacher, I taught biology. I was very up front with parents- we would be discussing the biological facts behind human reproduction, not sex. We talked about human anatomy, but as close as we got was saying that the man ejaculated sperm into the vagina during sexual intercourse. No discussion of the mechanics of how that would take place.
DeleteAt the end of the chapter, we watched a NOVA special called "The Miracle of Life" that showed where babies came from, starting with oocytes and sperm, and going all the way through vaginal delivery. All of it was strictly in accordance with the state standards that laid out what the students were supposed to know.
That isn't what the law is aimed at. It's trying to stop third grade and Kindergarden teachers from telling kids that they can be gay or transgender and not even know it.