I remember back when I was in grade school and high school all those years ago: parents were involved. They met with teachers, they saw administrators, they spoke to the school boards and the boards listened. None of the schools or employees attempted to hide the curriculum, nor did they tell the kids all sorts of crazy stuff. They just taught. Now
Indiana teachers predict mass exodus over CRT-inspired bill granting parental oversight
Teachers in Indiana are predicting a mass exodus from the profession if a state bill restricting how educators teach critical race theory-related lessons is passed.
“I cannot imagine that we’re going to have anything other than a huge exodus of teachers if this legislation goes through,” Jim Lang, a journalism teacher at Floyd Central High School, told the Indy Star. “And I think the problem is going to be, you’re not going to have enough people to fill the positions, or some of the folks you’re going to bring in aren’t going to be qualified.”
The bill passed largely along party lines in the state House last month and was referred to the Senate Education and Career Development Committee to progress.
House Bill 1134 would prohibit educators from promoting “certain concepts as part of a course of instruction” that “compel a school employee or student to adhere to certain tenets relating to the individual’s sex, race, ethnicity, religion, color, national origin, or political affiliation.”
The Star described the bill as one that would ban educators from teaching that any sex, race, ethnicity, religion, color, national origin or political affiliation is superior or inferior to another, or that any individual should feel psychological distress due to their sex, race, ethnicity, religion, color, national origin or political affiliation.
Why are they teaching this stuff in the first place? This has no place in K-12. It’s no wonder so many kids are coming out of the 12th grade unable to truly speak, write, do math, or anything.
If the bill is passed, parents could file complaints if teachers break any of the restrictions, which in some cases could lead to lawsuits against schools. Additionally, the bill would allow the state’s secretary of education to suspend or revoke teaching licenses if educators “willfully or wantonly” violate its provisions around promoting divisive concepts, according to the Star.
Teachers do not like this. They do not like parents or anyone else having influence on what they’re teaching someone else’s children. And, in fairness, most teachers are probably not the crazy. They’re just trying to do their job. But, hey, if the crazies want to quit? Like the ones who keeps showing up on Libs Of Tiktok
https://twitter.com/libsoftiktok/status/1493713299308830720
Let them quit. Most actually won’t, because they do not want to give up their above private sector salaries or their benefits. Though, if they do, it would be a great time for Republicans to get into teaching.
Read: SJWs Predict Teacher Exodus In Indiana Over Parental Oversight Bill »