
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


America’s public schools are once again in the crosshairs of our nation’s culture wars. Some parents want more say in what and how their kids are taught — especially topics like racial history and gender studies. These parents say schools are pushing a social agenda they don’t agree with. The call for more parental involvement includes increased challenges to the books used in classrooms. Last year, those cases quadrupled with challenges against nearly 1600 individual titles. Educators worry that the pushback against classroom materials can also achieve a broader goal — to challenge teachers with policies and laws that restrict what and how they can teach.
By Trey Kay and WVPB4.6
393393 ratings
America’s public schools are once again in the crosshairs of our nation’s culture wars. Some parents want more say in what and how their kids are taught — especially topics like racial history and gender studies. These parents say schools are pushing a social agenda they don’t agree with. The call for more parental involvement includes increased challenges to the books used in classrooms. Last year, those cases quadrupled with challenges against nearly 1600 individual titles. Educators worry that the pushback against classroom materials can also achieve a broader goal — to challenge teachers with policies and laws that restrict what and how they can teach.

90,841 Listeners

43,991 Listeners

38,549 Listeners

43,719 Listeners

27,181 Listeners

9,229 Listeners

4,008 Listeners

8,452 Listeners

1,259 Listeners

545 Listeners

7,709 Listeners

3,960 Listeners

14,641 Listeners

20,461 Listeners

16,352 Listeners