facebook-pixel

Letter: Our mission as educators should be to enlarge students’ exposure to voices that are different from their own

(Jeremy Harmon | The Salt Lake Tribune) A "read banned books" sign on the wall at Ken Sanders Rare Books in Salt Lake City on January 16, 2020.

As a parent of students in Davis School District, I am deeply concerned that the district holds the distinction of having the most titles challenged of any school district in the state and, of those challenged, 37 titles have been removed from its shelves.

I am concerned at the message this sends to our students and our community at large when it becomes acceptable to censor and bar access to books that highlight the experiences of vulnerable and marginalized groups, the same groups that have been the target of hate filled rhetoric and treatment in our very district.

I would hope as educators our mission is to educate and enlarge students’ exposure to voices that are different from their own, and that by that exposure our children may learn the very concepts of tolerance and inclusivity that have been lacking.

I worry that the efforts to battle hate and intolerance in our schools are being actively undermined by these policies that result in the silence of the very voices that speak from spaces of discrimination and oppression. We can and must do better.

Maren Williams Warnick, Syracuse

Submit a letter to the editor