Oklahoma’s education board has revoked the license of a former teacher who drew national attention during surging book-ban efforts across the U.S. in 2022 when she covered part of her classroom bookshelf in red tape with the words “Books the state didn’t want you to read.”
The decision Thursday went against a judge who had advised the Oklahoma Board of Education not to revoke the license of Summer Boismier, who had also put in her high school classroom a QR code of the Brooklyn Public Library’s catalogue of banned books.
An attorney for Boismier, who now works at the Brooklyn Public Library in New York City, told reporters after the board meeting that they would seek to overturn the decision.
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https://apnews.com/article/oklahoma-teacher-banned-books-2615726cd3e3eb7b04614ea969250f0e
Where do I buy that shirt? It’s awesome!
I went looking for it but since the pic is from 2022 I can’t find it anywhere. :(
https://shop.bklynlibrary.org/products/books-unbanned-qr-tee-black
Looks like it’s print on demand so they aren’t paying to house a large warehouse of stock.
While it may show words and a QR code with the same message, that one is not something I’d pay for or wear due to the different style. Thanks for the link though.
its very telling that they want children to not only not have access to these materials, but not know they they are be prevented from seeing those materials.
kind of horrifying… very weird ,cult-like behavior from conservatives.
Also its highly likely that all these children have access to the internet anyways and can access all of it and much more.
So the banned book is available in the public library? Some ban that is.
Small detail, New York City has three public library Systems (New York, Queens, and Brooklyn). While all three have Banned Books events, BPL specifically (in conjunction with Boston Public Library, LA County Library, San Diego Library and Seattle Public Library) runs a service called Books Unbanned that is said to offer a full collection of Banned Books (I believe NYPL and QPL’s banned collections are curated/limited) to essentially any US resident (Many libraries have residency requirements although I believe NYPL and QPL have waived those [when I was kid you had to bring a piece of mail in NYC to get a card]).
Brooklyn is in New York. Also, actual book bans are unconstitutional under the first amendment. What these laws do is prohibit state funded entities like public schools and public libraries in the state from having the books available. The books are still available in privately owned places.
PraegerU content? Totally fine.
Books kids actually want to read? Verboten.
I dunno, this penis Prager guy seems pretty cool