Law GOP state lawmaker introduces bill that would block teachers from discussing 'controversial' issues

GOP state lawmaker introduces bill that would block teachers from discussing 'controversial' issues

By Justin Wise
December 31, 2018 - 01:11 PM EST

An Arizona state lawmaker recently introduced a bill that would bar teachers from introducing "controversial issues" or engaging in any "political, ideological or religious" advocacy in their classroom.

State Rep. Mark Finchem (R) introduced House Bill 2002 in the Arizona State Legislature earlier this month, according to The Arizona Daily Star. The newspaper notes that if the bill were to pass, teachers could potentially lose their jobs for engaging in political or ideological discussions with their students.

The bill would require teachers to undergo annual ethics training and to abide by a strict ethics code. The code would bar teachers from introducing a "controversial issue" unrelated to a class subject. It would also prohibit teachers from publicly supporting or opposing any legislative, judicial or executive action.

Among other things, the bill also would prevent teachers from placing blame on one racial group of students for the "suffering and inequities" experienced by another group.

The Star notes that Finchem said in the bill that discussing ideological topics in the classroom leads to "indoctrination."

Finchem declined to comment to the Star. He told The Arizona Republic earlier this month that the bill was a direct response to concerns about politics in the classroom from his constituents.

Some educators told the Star that the bill from Finchem appears to be a direct response to the teacher-led #RedForEd movement. The movement led to a statewide teacher strike in April and gave way to Gov. Doug Ducey (R) and the Legislature announcing that teacher salaries would increase by 20 percent over a three-year period.

Finchem told the Republic that he considered teachers wearing #RedForEd shirts in the classroom inappropriate.

"If you step into a classroom with a Trump T-shirt, a Hillary T-shirt, a 'Vote No on 126' T-shirt, you're engaging in political speech in the classroom," he said. "If there's a political agenda behind it, leave it at home. Simple request."

Arizona state law prohibits public and charter school employees from utilizing school resources to influence the outcome of an election. The Republic reported that this law was a reason why some school districts warned teachers against wearing #RedForEd apparel in their classroom.

Jason Freed, president of the Tucson Education Association, told the Star that a law prohibiting teachers from discussing controversial issues would reflect poorly on them.

"It is our job to provide kids with an opportunity to think creatively," Freed said. "It's our job to help them to analyze whether they think something is good and why, and if it's not good, how they could make it better."

https://thehill.com/blogs/blog-brie...ker-introduces-bill-that-would-block-teachers
 
are you seriously implying that indoctrination of children doesn't work?

This isn't Nazi Germany. Children are exposed to differing opinions constantly and have plenty of avenues to do their own research.

And teachers trying to speak from power just undermines their message. They do too much retarded stuff for students to blindly accept their opinions.
 
This isn't Nazi Germany. Children are exposed to differing opinions constantly and have plenty of avenues to do their own research.

And teachers trying to speak from power just undermines their message. They do too much exceptional stuff for students to blindly accept their opinions.

Isn't that assuming that teaching kids to respect authority figures completely fails?
 
A Republican in Arizona wants to make it illegal to bitch about Mexicans in school? Wow.
 
Don't blame the teachers for what is the responsibility of the parents.

This is sex ed all over again.
 
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Do you people really think these SJW ideas came out of nowhere?

I get your slippery slope argument, but to say school does not indoctrinate students is so incredibly false. What do you think the communist did when they first got into power in China? Take over the schools. Yes, teachers should be able to have their own opinion, but outside of class or at least when it's appropriate (Ex debate class or something).

For God sake, I have a nine year old nephew that hates Trump. He obviously had no idea why when questioned further because he's NINE. Whenever I asked him where he was getting the idea that Trump was bad, he would always say his friends told him he was bad. Then one night when we were going to the mall, buying toys and bonding, he evetually told me his teachers told him that. I still wonder why he lied to me in the first place.

That shit DOES have an impact on children and I had many instances myself of teachers talking a about politics when it wasn't the focus (I even had annoying conservative teachers).
 
I'm not surprised that criticism of the US Army is listed as "controversial" given the creepy obsession many Americans have with it. I'm glad I can criticize the British Army all like without the fear of conservative ministers trying to put a stop to that.
 
I'm not surprised that criticism of the US Army is listed as "controversial" given the creepy obsession many Americans have with it. I'm glad I can criticize the British Army all like without the fear of conservative ministers trying to put a stop to that.
That's because they know we kicked their asses in WWI and they deserve the criticism.
USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA
 
This is as dumb as a Democratic politician demanding mandatory class discussion of how the patriarchy ruins everything. Sure, they can weasel around it by claiming they only have to discuss it, not support the dominant opinion, the kids can "think however they want" but we all know the dissenters to the progressive line would be singled out for attention. Same here. This is a tool by which anyone can be silenced by being labeled "conroversial", same way the current left-leaning teachers heap social scorn on anyone in class with opinions judged "problematic"
Agreed. My big problem is leftards trying to tell us we can't talk about subjects that hurt their feelings. The solution is not for rightfags to do the same damn thing.
 
Oh, had a thought come to mind remembering this quote in the article:

"'If you step into a classroom with a Trump T-shirt, a Hillary T-shirt, a 'Vote No on 126' T-shirt, you're engaging in political speech in the classroom,' he said. 'If there's a political agenda behind it, leave it at home. Simple request.'"

Yeah, that's not professional dressing, but it's just clothes. Their reasoning is that it should be kept out of the classroom--but if social studies are still safe, why can't it still be worn during that time? And what if a school decides to take this a step further and include the teacher's car just for having a single bumper sticker? That's not school property, that's the teacher's property. Why should a teacher be punished for that if they follow the rules otherwise?
 
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