FLALAX wrote:If this was at a University I could see your point but in High School?? No matter the content the local parents and communities should set the curriculum, no matter what the content. Remember these kids are minors and until 18 their parents can control the content their kids see.
So if one set of parents decides that they don't like a particular book used, they should have the right to veto it for all the others? In this case the admininstration said that the student was given an alternate choice.
There are people that don't believe in the Holocaust, that we landed on the moon, or evolution -should they be allowed to ban textbooks that mention these topics?
The Fon du Lac community decided that this book offered worthwhile life lessons - it was one family that didn't like it -
School Superintendent Gregory Maass said the initial complaint came from one family.
"We had a mother and father and student who questioned the book," he said. "The high school provided the student with an alternative book."
The parents were not satisfied and asked for the book to be removed from the curriculum, Maass said.
My feeling is the school board will vote to keep it in.