Sigh.
Gag laws seeking to restrict what schools can say about gender roles and LGBTQ+ humans and critical race theory (aka "anything at all about race stuff") are having the desired effect in many states.
I don't imagine for a second that any of the supporters of these measures wanted to see a bunch of lawsuits and arrests. No, the point of vague and threatening rules like these is to scare teachers and chill discourse and especially spook conflict-averse school leaders into backing away from all such content, as well as continue reinforcing the choicer talking point that public schools cannot be trusted.
And also to empower those board members who want to put the kibbosh on all that stuff.
So it was inevitable that a gag law would impact that most useless of school district practices, the strategic plan.
In my 39 years of teaching, I stepped up to become involved in every single strategic planning cycle, and I can say with absolute confidence that not once did the results of a strategic plan have any actual effect on how the school district operated and certainly not on how teachers did their jobs. Goals ranged from aspirational documents ("All students will become fluent in 21st century skills while showing skills required to be fully functional citizens while self-actualizing their way to accomplishment of personal success...") to catalogs of administrative fears ("The district will make sure to be a space safe enough to avoid any actual lawsuits") to implementation steps that accurately reflected the concerns of whichever group of parents showed up {"The school will continue to develop a strong middle school tiddly winks program"). And then they go to some shelf to gather dust (or, in modern times, into some software file that nobody will have the software to open within a decade).The process is far more fascinating that the eventual product, because it generally involves an assortment of stakeholders saying out loud what they actually think about education and schools.
And what the board of the Derby School District in Derby, Kansas is worried about is diversity. Specifically, noticing that it exists. Consequently, the right-leaning majority on the board axed the recent strategic plan proposal. Reactions from the board included
“I don’t think focusing on diversity is going to (help) ... our kids, academically,” board president Michael Blankenship said. “Rather than trying to point out our differences … we should try to find things that make us unite. We should find similarities.”Board member Pam Doyle, who voted in favor of the plan, said diversity efforts are common in the business world and should be part of the district’s mission.
“Diversity is something to be celebrated,” Doyle said. “The more diverse (the) administration, teachers, and staff that we have, the more we’re going to learn from each other.”
Board member Tina Prunier, who voted in favor of the plan, said she didn’t understand why concepts like diversity and equity are controversial.
“These words have been around long before political gain,” she said. “I don’t understand why it’s becoming such a divisive thing.”
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