Elkhorn School District Parent Seeks Ban on 444 Book Titles
Largest such request in nation? School district considers changing book policy.
In what the superintendent said may be the largest student reading material challenge in the nation, 444 books have been taken out of circulation in the Elkhorn Area School District.
Administrators are evaluating the challenged books for grade level appropriateness using Common Sense Media, Barnes and Noble, and Amazon.com for age-level ratings.
“To be frank, we probably never anticipated somebody bringing forth a challenge that would create such a disruption in the school environment,” Tadlock said. “It takes a lot of time and effort, and I’ll be honest, there is a certain amount of frustration.”
Some of the titles being challenged include:
- “Anna Karenina,” by Leo Tolstoy
- “Life of Pi,” by Yann Martel
- “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,” by Betty Smith
- “The Fault in Our Stars,” by John Green
- “The Grapes of Wrath,” by John Steinbeck
Tadlock doesn’t anticipate any of the books will be banned from the district, which is located in Walworth County, about 40 miles southwest of Milwaukee. He said many of the books have already been reviewed and returned to library shelves.
“We might have an age restriction based on the book, meaning they might need a parent’s permission, but I don’t think any of the books will be removed from circulation,” Tadlock said.
On Dec. 5, Tadlock sent a letter to Elkhorn Area School District families about the challenged books, including a list of the titles.
He said since sending the letter, he has received dozens of inquiries, mostly from parents upset that school resources are being used to review so many books.
“And people taking exception with the premise that one individual could restrict what their child or their student could have access to,” Tadlock said. “We’ve had a handful of emails as well that were supportive of the school reviewing and checking the materials to make sure there is not harmful material for students.”
The Elkhorn School Board will meet in January to review its current policy. Tadlock said given today’s environment, the board wants to revisit the policy of having to remove books from circulation while materials are being reviewed.
“I don’t know if there has been a challenge of this size in the entire nation,” Tadlock said. “We’ll look to make this more practical in the future.”
Earlier this year, the Menomonee Falls School District banned 33 titles prompting one of the banned authors, Jodi Picoult, to reach out to the school district for an explanation.
State Superintendent Jill Underly has called censorship “suppression,” and libraries “a bastion of freedom of thought, expression, and creativity.”
“Our school libraries are welcoming, exciting places for kids, where they can experience great stories, important histories and engage with big ideas and where they can be their full authentic selves without judgment,” Underly said recently.
From Tadlock’s standpoint, he said he can sympathize with some parents’ questioning of literature, because there isn’t the same ratings system that comes along with movies or other forms of media.
“It creates this debate because there is not a solid consensus,” Tadlock said. “It can be a challenge because there is not a uniform system.”
Listen to the WPR report here.
Elkhorn Area School District considering changing book policy after parent challenges more than 400 titles was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.
Right’s frightening crackdown on books should be alarm bells for folks…
Read about it in Fahrenheit 451, or WWII history books.
Why can one parent have the power to determine what books are available to all of the other school children in the district? The didn’t the Superintendent stand up to the parent? His responsibility is to the educational of all students and ethically needs to challenge actions like this. This is how Neofacism gets started.
be grateful that you don’t live in elkhorn and don’t have children exposed to the stupidity of these adults who probably couldn’t understand tolstoy anyway.