Still watching what's going on @ NEW COLLEGE of Florida? Next board meeting is today at 2pm. What will DeSantis allies installed atop the college do next? Faculty & students unsure what will come for tenure, academic courses.
There's numerous threads to watch 👀 🧵
2. Among other issues... trustees today will vote on tenure for 5 faculty who have already been approved by every academic body. Interim president Corcoran has directed them to deny or defer-- an unusual directive that hints at political motives tampabay.com/news/education…
3. These faculty were previously directed to drop out of applying for tenure, with the threat that they'd be denied if they didn't. This is all clearly undermining the integrity of academic freedom, perhaps as is intended. Our full statement @PENamerica pen.org/press-release/…
4. Also, the search committee for a new president has NO student govt rep. This has been a norm in presidential searches at FL colleges & univs. Instead they have appointed a student who is an intern for a GOP state Senator, who is not in student gov. heraldtribune.com/story/opinion/…
5. Nagging Q's also continue about whether these new "trustees" are following FL sunshine laws. They have openly talked about private conversations, text messages about hiring decisions etc. No one should be surprised they want to circumvent transparency. heraldtribune.com/story/opinion/…
6. Sports! New College has suddenly pivoted to investing in sports despite there being no facilities for this. Athletic director / baseball coach was hired who has ties to one of the trustee's private schools. Here's a local letter to the editor: heraldtribune.com/story/news/edu…
7. All of this happens after they dismantled the college diversity office and fired its dean; terminated the previous president; the provost stepped down. The stories of dismissals and upheavals continue. washingtonpost.com/education/2023…
8. Talk to students, parents, and alumni. They praise the college's special, inclusive culture. They are scared of what's being done, heartbroken about the impact, especially for the college's LGBTQ+ students. Read their stories, #SaveNewCollege. tallahassee.com/story/opinion/…
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Yikes. A year after Central York school district in PA was at the center of a book ban crusade, here it is again, making questionable choices.
As they did last year, students are protesting ongoing book bans in the district-- now they feel intimidated /1 yorkdispatch.com/story/news/edu…
On Friday, during school hours, five students were called into a mtg with the superintendent & district leaders where they were "harangued" and spoken to "sternly"... for what?
Apparently for speaking publicly about the district and the bans. /2
What did the students do? Apparently they were reprimanded for talking to the press earlier last week -- for expressing frustration with the district's book bans, and making plans to protest.
NEW. An updated book ban report for the current school year from @PENamerica shows how new state laws are supercharging book suppression in schools, esp in Florida. 🧵 #FReadom#EdScare#BookBans nyti.ms/41DFeJC
As I told @nytimes: "This is much bigger than you can really count... People need to understand that it’s not a single book being removed in a single school district, it’s a set of ideas that are under threat just about everywhere.” /2
Read and share: pen.org/report/banned-…
Critically, although the book ban movement began with individuals and groups acting locally, they're efforts have been enhanced by the passage of state laws, which have together created an unprecedented chilling effect on schools, which we @PENamerica call the #EdScare. /3
IcYMi. In the flurry of other outrageous news... On top of being first to unconstitutionally censor drag shows, now TN is moving to pass a law introducing felony charges and $100K fines for publishers if they sell obscene materials to public schools 🧵 tennessean.com/story/news/pol…
2. Ofc, TN already has laws against distribution of obscene materials to minors. So why this law? Clearly it's got an ulterior motive: to ban books by threatening or censoring publishers.
3. The law will give local DA's and the state AG discretion to determine when a book is 'obscene.' And that's where the sleight of hand is. The bill's sponsor Rep Lynn has a tenuous grasp on what that means, believing any "sexually explicit" content = obscenity. That's not true.
Some are so bent on cracking down on drag, LGBTQ books, or teaching about racism, that they are both passing new laws and enforcing existing ones-- even when there's no evidence of violations.
Undercover cops in the audience determined there were no lewd acts in the drag show, that children were not "exposed" to anything breaking the law. No matter... the Dept of Business and Professional Regulation filed a complaint to strip the venue of its liquor license anyway. /2
Reminds me of Oklahoma! Last July the state board of Ed downgraded Tulsa School District's accreditation status over an allegation that a teacher training about implicit bias violated HB 1775 - the state's "divisive concepts" ed gag order. But... /3 cnn.com/2022/08/27/us/…
A new bill in Texas, SB 1443, looks to take the censorship crusade in schools to another level.
It would ban LGBTQ topics and sex from books in schools, prohibit referrals to websites, ban drag or other forms of performance in school plays, & penalize publishers 🧵/1
The first part of the bill details topics to be barred from all books in schools, incl:
- "any any type of romantic or sexual attraction
between individuals of the same sex"
- "transgenderism"
- "sexual intercourse"
/2 capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/88R/bi…
Don't miss the part where it would also BAN referring to websites that contain these topics. Breathtaking when you think about it: could students be referred to a news site? wikipedia? Pretty sure there's a lot of the web that acknowledges LGBTQ people exist and sex is a thing /3
Dig into almost any school book ban in FL, and you find 1 person--or a small group-- filing objections to books en masse, demanding removals. The restrictions on books this vocal minority have gotten are astonishing, precisely b/c they're often enacted without any process /2
Ofc, parents should be able to engage with schools about books & curricula. But schools also have to balance the demands of a few people with the objectives of public education, and the interests of ALL parents. Too often, that isn't happening. /3