I served on a school board for 11 years, many of them as vice chair, not that long ago. Other than the annual budget fights and the governor's ill advised consolidation mandate things went smoothly. Despite taking a controversial stand on the issue, I was only vilified in one email. In fact when I had decided to not run for reelection following the vote to withdraw from RSU 26 the people who had talked me into changing my mind had battled me all that year on it. "We may not agree on everything, but no one in Veazie cares more about our kids and families than you do."
That's in contrast to the community portrayed in Mike Hixenbaugh's They Came For The Schools: One Town's Fight Over Race And Identity, And The New War For America's Classrooms. Hixenbaugh spent three years reporting on Southlake, a small Texas town, during a time when its reputation for academic excellence was becoming overshadowed by its reputation for conservative backlash to progress.
The controversy began in 2018 when eight Southlake students posted a racist video on social media. Parents demanded to know what the high school was going to do to punish the students and make sure similar incidents didn't happen in the future. Administrators felt it was just kids making poor decisions...
...until a special meeting the school board called for community feedback where many parents described racist incidents their children had experienced. The taunts expressed in the video were indicative of an undercurrent of racism running through the whole school system.
The school committee tried to change things for the better. They put out a call for community members--parents, students, teachers--to be part of a committee to study the climate and make recommendations. At the first meeting one member asked the others, "Are you ready for what's going to happen after we try to get this done?" only to be asked, "What could go wrong?"
Plenty it seems. Nothing was being to deter white students from using the N word with abandon. When a Black girl heard the slur and went to the principal he advised her to not let something like that take her joy. And in 2020 when the modest recommendations were announced they were met with hostility.
And this was just the beginning.
They Came For The Schools is not an easy read for people who care about American schools' book banning, curriculum white washing, and failing to protect children from marginalized groups. But it's a necessary and important one. Actions like those portrayed in the book are going on all over this nation. And there's a certain governor with his eyes on the oval office who plans to turn America into a larger version of his state.
On a purrrsonal note, last Saturday I went out for the afternoon with friends. We explored Goodwill. I found a really big unicorn squishmallow. And we had a sweet treat at Sweet Frog. Their fro yo and toppings are so good! It was such a wonderful break from homework!
A great big shout out goes out to the friends I had a wonderful afternoon with.
Jules Hathaway
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