Students need to be challenged, not coddled by the few
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Newport-Mesa school officials must sometimes feel like they just
can’t win.
Take, for example, the case of the teacher showing R-rated movies
to a junior high history class.
The retribution from parents and community members was swift and
stinging as critics railed at district leaders for not having
stricter oversight and control over the content in the classrooms.
Now with their guard up, district officials acted quickly when
complaints surfaced over a flier being distributed to high school
students touting an upcoming speech by muckraking author Eric
Schlosser, who has written on such topics as the decriminalization of
marijuana and the nation’s penchant for eating fast food.
And even though the latter was the topic of his speech, part of
the Newport Beach Library Foundation’s Distinguished Speakers Series,
it was the content of his other books that riled some parents.
It’s hard for us to fault district officials for following their
instincts and nixing the flier from schools, but in the cold light of
morning, let’s take a look at the real debate.
Initially, the concern was the flier depicting Schlosser’s speech
was one promoting the drug use debate. It was not.
Others questioned why taxpayers were footing the bill for someone
like Schlosser in the first place. Taxpayers were not.
More troubling is the idea that the plaintive wails of a few,
possibly misinformed parents, should be enough to quash the ability
of young teens to hear and listen to varied points of view.
That, we can’t emphasize enough, should not ever be the case.
We agree the views of the minority must always be protected. But
let’s be clear, handing out a flier that promotes a speech about the
pitfalls of eating burgers and fries is hardly a threat to the moral
fiber of our children.
Further, those parents whose child may actually pick up such a
flier have a very real choice in this matter -- decline to have your
child attend the event.
But to take the views of that minority and decide that the
majority shouldn’t even know of the speech’s existence is
antithetical to the free marketplace of ideas and knowledge that
forms the very basis of our American democracy.
We agree that the district acts in the best interest of the
student when it screens what types of fliers can or can’t be
distributed to campuses. But the Distinguished Speakers Series is no
sophomoric event. It’s a prestigious lineup of speeches that has for
years featured the viewpoints of well-respected authors, dignitaries,
national and international leaders.
And the library foundation, which funds the series -- not the
taxpayers -- is made up of Newport’s finest philanthropists and city
leaders. Parents and district leaders should hardly feel threatened
by such a group.
So our appeal is for reason and critical thinking to win the day.
High school students are not sheep. They have vibrant and questioning
minds and they need to have their thirst for knowledge quenched.
To offer to quench that thirst with only syrups and sweet nectar
and deny the existence of the sour is not being true to those young
minds, especially to our values as a nation and a community.
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