Fasces wrote:We're not that far out from debates about teaching creationism in biology class; a nebulous retriction against 'political' speech in a classroom is easily abused. I mention evolution or climate change... am I being political? I mention that me and my wife saw the parade on Labor Day. Is that political? What if its me and my husband? If I say the Pledge of Allegiance? Can I sing the National Anthem? Can I sing Canada's National Anthem? North Korea's? Can teachers go on strike? Can they talk about it? If a new 9/11 happens, we gonna prosecute teachers for putting CNN on?
If a teacher goes on and on about politics world of warcraft, and doesn't teach the curriculum or standards... if the students are below grade level in achievement because all day they go on and on about BLM their raid leader and doesn't discuss trigonometry, he'll get fired for poor performance anyway.
This is why curriculums exist and there are often laws regulating how it should be crafted, don't you think? Ultimately, the decision to ban/require teaching X is essentially a curricular decision, and yes that part is indeed political and the politics happens outside school for the most part.
I don't think the examples you mentioned are the same as the CRT and white supremacy bans either. In those examples, I don't think the teacher is actually teaching anything or grading based on it. And students can opt out of singing the National Anthem or the Pledge of Allegiance, it's their right to. But they cannot opt out of tests or classes...
Fasces wrote:Patients on Medicaid can't choose their doctors freely either. You don't get to choose your court appointed lawyer. Public options are standardized, not personalized.
Indeed, which is why it makes sense for curricular decisions to be so contested in practice.
Fasces wrote:The parent can talk to their child about the political views they have been exposed to and contextualize them at home.
What happens if the child never tells the parent and it's not part of the curriculum?
As in, is it against the teacher's speech to force adherence into the curriculum? If so, is it an acceptable restriction on the teacher's speech?
Fasces wrote:In the US, they are. That's why the GOP is so transparently dishonest about their concerns about 'public workers' discussing politics but they're real quiet about their jesus camps, liberty charters and patriot curriculums. It's why they're so gung-ho about shutting down public schools and replacing them with voucher systems for private ones.
This goes both ways, though. Their position also accepts the existence of private progressive schools with a progressive curriculum, deconstruction camps and anti-racist charters.
Also, I don't think this would apply to charter schools since they operate under the terms of an agreement signed with the state.
Fasces wrote:Can we stick to the issue of: 'teachers expressing political opinions in a classroom' without going on tangents about curriculum?
If a student asks me who I'm voting for in an upcoming election, it is absurd to me that answering that question should be a firable offense. Parental rights do not trump the rights of others to speak freely.
But the curriculum
is important. As you said, teachers are not supposed to veer out of it to begin with!
An informal conversation in break, I think, is a different matter. It's not teaching, at least not formally and not open for grading. Students are thus not required to listen to whatever the teacher is saying.
The CRT ban is a curricular decision, I agree that if it's solely a matter of sharing opinions that should not be banned. But that is not what the law regulates, at all, and FWIW I think there is nothing wrong with simply debating the issue.
If it's about sharing political opinions, I've actually seen US laws banning that but in the workplace.