Outrage over schools' handling of Obama telecast

FALLS VILLAGE — A large and vocal contingent of citizens came to the regular monthly meeting of the Region One Board of Education on Monday, Sept. 14, to voice their displeasure over the school district’s decision not to air President Barack Obama’s Sept. 8 address to the nation’s schoolchildren live.

Addressing the crowd of some 40 people squeezed into the library at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, Region One Superintendant Patricia Chamberlain said, “It was my intention to avoid any political controversy� when she sent district principals an e-mail message Tuesday morning asking schools to tape the speech for later viewing.

Region One schools were closed Friday, Sept. 4, when the text of the speech was made available.

And with the Labor Day holiday, Chamberlain took what she felt was a “cautious and prudent� approach to presenting the speech.

She also said she had received calls from parents expressing concern about having their children see the speech at school. The calls “accelerated,� she added.

“It seemed unreasonable to go against the wishes of parents, and it also made sense to give access to the speech by taping it. It seemed a viable alternative to broadcasting.

“My hope was that giving a choice would alleviate� any problems.

Her explanation was not well received.

Marjory Reid of Salisbury said,  “I am absolutely enraged.â€�

“The world is changing,� Reid said. “Students need to be aware of the change in society. You missed a rare opportunity.�

John Miller of Cornwall decried the influence of “phone calls from a handful of parents. It doesn’t make sense. What if one of them called about a textbook?�

Robin O’Connor of Salisbury said she believed parents who called to object to the speech “are mad because they lost the election.

“It’s racially motivated,� she added. “They didn’t want their children to hear an articulate black man. When I first heard about this, I thought it must be in Louisiana or someplace.�

And Judy Gott of Salisbury said “It sounded a lot less like options and a lot more like censorship.�

Other speakers asked if any other visiting speaker would require prior approval. “You’ve already set the bar at the president,� one man observed.

Norma Lake of Cornwall echoed this theme. In her 17 years teaching social studies at Housatonic, “We taught our students how to handle different viewpoints respectfully,� she said, and she wondered if administrators would insist on vetting remarks by state Rep. Roberta Willis (D-64) or Senator Andrew Roraback (R-30) on one of their visits to the school.

And from Salisbury’s Al Ginouves: “My response would have been ‘we don’t interfere in teacher’s classrooms over current events.’ That would have been the end of it.

“Now we need to focus on how something like this could happen in a democracy.� He asked for an acknowledgment of a mistake, and concluded, “Let’s make lemonade out of this lemon.�

In Chamberlain’s Sept. 8 e-mail to principals of the six regional elementary schools and the high school, she wrote, “I trust our educators to render the speech educationally beneficial, and not political, for our students. This choice gave our faculties the opportunity to plan appropriate lessons tied to our curriculum,� and allowed time for parents to opt out if desired.

Which schools showed it?

In Region One, only the Lee H. Kellogg School in Falls Village aired the speech. Principal Maria Bulson said in an interview that she spent Tuesday morning reading the speech and making arrangements for children in grades five through eight to call home for parental permission to watch.

Kellogg’s enrollment is small enough to make a quick adjustment to the schedule, she said.

About half the middle school students opted to eat their lunch and watch the president in a social studies classroom, she reported.

Bulson said the speech was “lovely.�

“He told kids to work hard, do your own work, set your own goals. It fit right in with what we are doing here.�

Salisbury Central School Chris Butwill said, “We opted not to show the speech live — but teachers could show it later in the week with parental notification and an option for parents to decide they did not want their student to watch.�

Sharon Center School did not show the telecast.

Chamberlain said in a phone interview Tuesday, Sept. 15, that she was preparing a memo for Region One principals instructing them to show the taped speech if they had not done  so already.

The six towns in the Region One School District are Cornwall, Falls Village, Kent, Sharon, Salisbury and North Canaan. They share the regional high school in Falls Village.

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