
Originally Posted by
Mewtwo-D2
Pariah, I have no idea what kind of school you go to, but at my old one, they never stopped telling us how many Indians died when the Europeans came over. The REAL history they don't teach is that white people are not the source of all evil in the world. In fact, we spent five chapters on the effects of European exploration- such as spread of disease, death, chaos, and the rounding up of Indians to put them in special camps consisting of the land we didn't want. They spent one chapter discussing World War II, and didn't even name any of the battles except for the Normandy Invasion. The war in the Pacific was reduced to a mention of Pearl Harbor and a five-page diatribe of why it was wrong that we dropped two nuclear bombs on Japan.
As for the book raising questions about sex, it's because the image most kids will be familiar with at that age is mommy and daddy, man and woman. If I had read a book at that age about daddy and daddy I would've had a lot of questions as how does that work? I think for first graders they should stick with things like Winnie the Pooh, early Betsy~Tacy, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and things like that. Books about children, written specifically for children. They have nothing to do with any relationship other than friendship. Friendship should be one of the main values we're teaching to elementary school children and we're not. You can promote tolerance afterwards, but a child should not be taught to assimilate with what the school board considers to be the norm. They shouldn't be sexualized at that young an age. They should learn about real friends, manners, how to stand on their own two feet. They should have the kinds of books that teach that in their library and on their required reading lists. They have to learn that it's normal to not agree with or like everybody, but should also learn when it's okay to speak up and when they should be quiet about it. Go ahead and take out all the books that deal with relationships other than friendship from elementary school libraries, even Tom Sawyer if they feel the need to. That leaves a lot of books, and a lot of them are much better suited to the age group. Let the parents teach their children about adult relationships. Keep those books in public libraries, in the childrens section and let the parents decide which ones they want their kids to read.
The only books I can think of that they would take out would be a few fairy tales, Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys, and the Babysitters Club. I still have most of the books I had when I was 6 or 7, and very few of them deal with relationships stronger than friendship. A lot of them barely mentioned the parents, except for Besty~Tacy and the Little House books, and plenty of them had single parents, whether from death or divorce. I think parents should have more control over what their children are being sent home with at that level. No book should be assigned to the required reading list without having a meeting that involves parents. If they don't care enough to show up, then so be it, but the parents who actually care about their children should have a say in what their children are being forced to read.