A coordinated effort to limit what teachers can teach about history, racism, sexism, and systemic oppression throughout history has educators concerned about their students, the impact on the library, and civic life in general.
Pat Scales takes on a student teacher who thinks Captain Underpants is inappropriate, parent complaints about comics and horror, and a teacher who is using markers to alter problematic illustrations in picture books.
A librarian and intellectual freedom advocate on Dr. Seuss, library policies, and cancel culture.
Questions about the ethics of fines, a public library crowded with kids during the pandemic, and a librarian who doesn't want kindergarteners to borrow books.
In majority-white regions, librarians are bringing diverse books to kids, even when their efforts meet with resistance.
Pat Scales fields questions about video read-alouds, the fate of outdated "classic" books, and parents' disapproval of books about immigration.
Pat Scales offers advice and opinion on student privacy, tween advisory boards, labeling, and serving students during the pandemic.
School librarian Jaynie Korzi made an interactive digital book display spotlighting challenged books that are in the library's collection.
Sherman Alexie's "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian" tops the list.
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