![]() She said she no longer feels safe keeping a copy of “The Hate U Give” by Angie Thomas, in part because it depicts racialized reactions to a police shooting, or any books by Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison. Listen to NBC News' "Southlake" podcast: All episodes available nowĪ high school English teacher said that it would take her months to review every book in her classroom and that based on the guidelines, she would most likely need to get rid of many of them. “Reviewing classroom libraries is necessary to ensure books are aligned to state standards.” ![]() “Best practices for libraries and classroom libraries includes the continuous and updated list of titles,” Fitzgerald said. ![]() ![]() She said the rubric was not created by the district, though she acknowledged that it was included in presentation slides shared with teachers to guide their decisions on which books are appropriate for class libraries. ![]() The move comes just days after the Carroll school board reprimanded a fourth-grade teacher who had kept a copy of “This Book Is Anti-Racist” by Tiffany Jewell in her classroom library following complaints from a mother who said the book violated her family’s “morals and faith.” She had also complained about how the teacher responded to her concerns.Īfter this article was published, Carroll spokeswoman Karen Fitzgerald sent a statement denying that the district was explicitly directing teachers to remove books from their classrooms. ![]()
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