Black lives matter to some, but not all.
An elementary school in Sacramento is under fire after one of its teachers allegedly threw away studentsâ Black Lives Matter movement art project, reportedly saying it was too political and inappropriate.
Suggested Reading
This follows a volunteer teacherâs assignment to create art about causes people cared about.
Perhaps the school staffer, identified as Mr. Madden, wouldâve been more interested if the assignment was meant for white people who didnât care.
On Thursday, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) fired off a letter to San Juan Unified School District condemning the Del Paso Manor Elementary School for censorship and unlawful restrictions on student speech.
According to NBC affiliate KCRA, the parent volunteer, identified as Ms. Kincaid, was banned from teaching any further classes following an âuncomfortableâ exchange with the teacher.
â(The teacher) pressed our parent to say why she felt that Black Lives Matter was an appropriate topic to be discussed at school, and also to explain how Black Lives Matter was something they should be talking about when thereâs no shootings that happened at the school,â ACLU Foundation of Northern California attorney Abre Conner wrote.
The letter went on to detail how the unnamed schoolâs principal âbacked Mr. Madden by irrationally stating that Black Lives Matter lessons are political statements and therefore off limits for public display.â
Conner also said the school could not âsingle outâ the artwork and removing it is âan impermissible viewpoint restriction.â
Because of the âharmâ caused to his clients, the lawyer requested that the school district issue a public apology, along with other concessions, including cultural and sensitivity training for staff and parent engagement training.
The school district held its ground about how the assignment was for students to produce artwork related to changes they wanted to see within the school, not larger social issues.
âStudents whose artwork focused on large social issues, which varied in topic, and was not directly tied to the school, were asked by the teacher to complete another poster the next day.â
âAll artwork that met the assignmentâs purpose was displayed in the classroom,â KCRA reported.
The ACLU doubled down, calling out the bigotry sweeping across their region.
In a statement, the organization indicated how the schoolâs actions are part of âa pervasive pattern of anti-blackness in California schools,â noting how it had to intervene in school districts across California, including Fresno Unified, Visalia Unified, and Alameda Unified, for creating a racially hostile climate for Black students and for students who support Black students.
âBlack students in the state, and across the country, are consistently discriminated against and targeted by teachers and administrators, with research showing that they are 3.4 times more likely to be disciplined than white students,â the statement concluded.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.