District checks into book review policy
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- An uproar over three novels and a sociology textbook
has district officials rethinking one of their policies.
After nearly three hours of public debate Tuesday night, the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District board approved four controversial
books for use in schools.
The novels “Of Love and Shadows,” by South American author Isabel
Allende, “Snow Falling on Cedars,” by David Guterson, and “The French
Lieutenant’s Woman,” by John Fowles, as well as the textbook “Sociology
and You,” by Jon L. Sheppard and Robert W. Greene, were approved by a
5-2 vote.
But the battle of the books won’t stop there.
When it became evident to trustee Wendy Leece, who opposed the books,
that the many parents who shared her distaste for the material and had
come to speak were not swaying her fellow trustees, she began questioning
the system.
“I’m asking the superintendent to go back and give me the paperwork
[proving] that we did follow our policy and that the number of people who
should have checked off on the book did,” Leece said Wednesday.
Ten years ago, a similar debate spawned a policy change for
controversial sex education books, Supt. Robert Barbot said.
In 1991, a group of community members and the school board agreed that
in addition to meeting legal requirements, sex education textbooks must
each have three “cards” that would indicate that three separate teachers
wanted to use the books and had reviewed them.
Leece questioned where the three cards were for these books.
“These books were definitely controversial, but [the card process]
wasn’t required of them,” Barbot explained.
The question now, Barbot said, is whether the additional review
process should be required for all books or just controversial ones.
Leece said the policy definitely needs to be updated and that what she
would like to see put in place is a parent group that would review all
the material.
A subcommittee, which trustees Judy Franco, Martha Fluor and Leece sit
on, will study that question and eventually make a recommendation to the
board.
“We recognize that, as with all policies, they need to be looked at,
updated if you will, so that they address whatever appears to need
addressing as a result of things that take place in the community,”
Franco said.
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