Its raining cats and dogs outside, got fireplace going and a bottle of red breathing inside. Yet I'm still fuming over this piece I wrote earlier today for the Seattle Times Opinion Page blog Ed Cetera.
I took a pretty even tone, the right course of action until we learn more about why a teacher at Thurgood Marshall Elementary School in Seattle removed an 8-year-old girl from class because the girl was wearing olive oil-based hair products. I still don't think the parents' first step should've been to call a lawyer - that never endears you to school officials so better left as a trump card. But maybe relations with the school weren't all that cordial to begin with. I hope the teacher really examines her conscience and ponders whether in hindsight, she acted responsibly, ethically and with compassion towards a young girl vulnerable to feeling different and excluded. In addition, if this teacher is allergic to one black hair care product, chances are there may be many she's allergic to. Is an urban, diverse school the right setting for her? Accommodations are appropriate, but they must be realistic.
Earlier this week in my Seattle Times column, I took a hard line on an education jobs bill in Congress. I have nothing against more money going into education, Lord knows it is one of the most underfunded mandates out there, but this is the time to press for the change President Obama promised not just write a blank check.
1 comment:
When did our public schools become primarily a place of employment for adults over a place of learning for children? This teacher is a sad disappointment to the profession and what might she stumble upon in another school? Much the same, kids who need teaching and she without the ability so find excuses for her own failures as a teacher. She needs a new profession, and I do not believe there is any allergic to olive oil, it is among the oldest fruits on earth.
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