Current:Home > FinanceGeorgia board upholds firing of teacher for reading a book to students about gender identity -Strategic Profit Zone
Georgia board upholds firing of teacher for reading a book to students about gender identity
View
Date:2025-04-26 07:35:03
ATLANTA (AP) — The firing of a Georgia teacher who read a book on gender fluidity to her fifth grade class was upheld Thursday by the Georgia Board of Education.
Katie Rinderle had been a teacher for 10 years when she got into trouble in March for reading the picture book “My Shadow Is Purple” by Scott Stuart at Due West Elementary School, after which some parents complained.
The case in suburban Atlanta’s Cobb County drew wide attention as a test of what public school teachers can teach in class, how much a school system can control teachers and whether parents can veto instruction they dislike. It also came amid a nationwide conservative backlash to books and teaching about LGBTQ+ subjects in school.
Rinderle has maintained that the book was about inclusivity. She was fired in August, and filed an appeal the next month.
At their meeting Thursday, the state board voted unanimously to affirm the Cobb County School Board’s decision without discussing it, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.
Cobb County adopted a rule barring teaching on controversial issues in 2022, after Georgia lawmakers earlier that year enacted laws barring the teaching of “divisive concepts” and creating a parents’ bill of rights. Rinderle’s attorneys said a prohibition of “controversial issues” is so vague that teachers can never be sure what’s banned.
In its 21-page review, the board found that Cobb County’s policies are not “unconstitutionally vague,” and that her firing was not a “predetermined outcome.”
Georgia law gives either Rinderle or the school district 30 days to appeal the decision in Cobb County Superior Court.
Meanwhile, Rinderle and the Georgia Association of Educators are suing the district and its leaders for discrimination related to her firing. The complaint filed last week in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, alleges that the plaintiffs “have been terminated or fear discipline under (Cobb’s) vague censorship policies for actively and openly supporting their LGBTQ students.”
In the months since Rinderle was fired, the Cobb County School District has removed books it has deemed to be sexually explicit from its libraries, spurring debate about what power the district has to make those decisions. Marietta City Schools took similar steps.
This year’s ongoing legislative session has brought with it a series of bills that seek to cull sexually explicit books from schools, ban sex education for younger students, display the Ten Commandments in classrooms and allow religious chaplains to counsel teachers and students.
veryGood! (63851)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Coast-to-coast Super Tuesday contests poised to move Biden and Trump closer to November rematch
- Migrant crossings along the southern border increase as officials prepare for larger spike
- San Francisco votes on measures to compel drug treatment and give police surveillance cameras
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- New satellite will 'name and shame' large-scale polluters, by tracking methane gas emissions
- Donald Trump wins North Dakota caucuses, CBS News projects
- A month after cyberattack, Chicago children’s hospital says some systems are back online
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- On front lines of the opioid epidemic, these Narcan street warriors prevent overdose deaths
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Multiple explosions, fire projecting debris into the air at industrial location in Detroit suburb
- In North Carolina, primary voters choosing candidates to succeed term-limited Gov. Roy Cooper
- Allegheny Wood Products didn’t give proper notice before shutting down, lawsuit says
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- 5-time Iditarod champion Dallas Seavey kills and guts a moose that got entangled with his dog team
- Luann de Lesseps and Mary-Kate Olsen's Ex Olivier Sarkozy Grab Lunch in NYC
- New satellite will 'name and shame' large-scale polluters, by tracking methane gas emissions
Recommendation
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
A New EDF-Harvard Satellite Will Monitor Methane Emissions From Oil and Gas Production Worldwide
EAGLEEYE COIN: El Salvador Educates Students on Bitcoin
Judge orders prison for Michigan man who made threats against Jewish people, synagogue
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
EAGLEEYE COIN: Blockchain technology is at the heart of meta-universe and Web 3 development
'Real horsepower': See video of runaway horses galloping down Ohio highway
Credit card late fees to be capped at $8 under Biden campaign against junk fees