District allows âCaged Birdâ to sing
Supt. Alan Rasmussen ruled that the Ocean View School District will not ban Maya Angelouâs book âI Know Why the Caged Bird Singsâ at Tuesdayâs board meeting, but asked that the district consider requiring parental permission to check out the controversial novel.
In a meeting often interrupted by applause from the audience, Rasmussen and several trustees praised Angelouâs autobiographical book as a worthy piece of literature, while acknowledging that parents should make the final decision on whether the bookâs contents are appropriate for their children. The themes in âCaged Bird,â which came out in 1969 and has often incited controversy in schools, include rape, teen pregnancy and child molestation.
âOur decisions should reflect our principles and not individual preferences,â Rasmussen told the board. âWhile everyone has a preference or a way of looking at things that arenât necessarily wrong, others may see things differently.â
Trustee John Briscoe and former Westminster School District Trustee Judy Ahrens have attempted to remove the book from school shelves, with Ahrens reading a passage from the book at the Oct. 6 board meeting. The two also addressed the Huntington Beach City Council about the issue last month. After Rasmussen announced his decision, Briscoe said he still believed the book was unsuitable for students.
âThe book is a good read,â he said. âIâve never said the book should be removed from society or the public libraries or Barnes & Noble. I think itâs a fine book for adults. I donât think itâs an appropriate book for little boys and girls.â
Rasmussen ordered the book removed from shelves last month after the complaints, and an instructional review committee of teachers and administrators read the book and submitted a report to Rasmussen. As of Tuesday, âCaged Birdâ was still absent from school shelves.
Rasmussen said the district would implement a new system to keep the book away from students who did not have permission to check them out.
As one example, he said, librarians could keep the book behind their desks.
Trustee Debbie Cotton praised the efforts of Rasmussen and the review committee, saying she considered the topic a 1st Amendment issue. She added that despite the novelâs graphic nature, she didnât feel the subject matter was inappropriate for children.
âWhen you read the book, there is a context for it,â Cotton said. âItâs also done from an 8-year-oldâs perspective, so itâs not done in an obscene way.â
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