Georgia teacher trying to reverse firing for reading controversial book on gender identity to 5th graders

A Georgia fifth-grade public school teacher is attempting to save her job in a termination hearing that concluded Friday after she was fired earlier this year for reading her students a book on gender identity the district says is prohibited in class instruction under state law.

Due West Elementary teacher Katie Rinderle, who has been on leave for more than a month after teaching for 10 years, was fired in March for reading the book “My Shadow Is Purple,” which features a nonbinary character and challenges the concept that there are only two genders.

“When I saw the book, at the book fair, I read it. I thought it was a wonderful book,” Rinderle said on the stand during the two-day hearing. Rinderle said her students chose the book out of several options she gave them.

Rinderle said the book was “about inclusivity, balance, acceptance and being true to yourself.”

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The hearing was initiated under a state law that protects teachers from unjustified firing. A panel of three retired school principals will make a recommendation on whether Rinderle should keep her job and submit it to the school board, which will decide to either accept or change the recommendation. The panel has five to make their recommendation, which the board plans to vote on at their next meeting.

Rinderle could appeal her firing to the state Board of Education and into court.

The case comes as parents and Republican lawmakers across the country attempt to remove books about LGBTQ+ subjects from school curriculum and libraries.

“This termination is unrelated to education,” Rinderle’s lawyer Craig Goodmark argued during the hearing. “It exists to create political scapegoats for the elected leadership of this district. Reading a children’s book to children is not against the law.”

The Cobb County School District says Rinderle broke the school district’s rules and Georgia’s new Divisive Concepts Law, both of which prohibit teachers from using controversial topics in their instruction. Parents complained about the book after learning the book was read to their children and Rinderle was terminated.

“Introducing the topic of gender identity and gender fluidity into a class of elementary grade students was inappropriate and violated the school district policies,” Sherry Culves, a lawyer for the school district, said.

Rinderle testified that she believed the book “to be appropriate” and not a “sensitive topic.” She claimed that the book carries a broader message for gifted students and touches on “their many interests and feeling that they should be able to choose any of their interests and explore all of their interests.”

The district’s rule barring instruction on controversial subjects was adopted last year after state lawmakers passed the Divisive Concepts Law and created a parents’ bill of rights to give parents more say in their children’s education and “the right to direct the upbringing and the moral or religious training of his or her minor child.”

“The Cobb County School District is very serious about the classroom being a neutral place for students to learn,” Culves said. “One-sided instruction on political, religious or social beliefs does not belong in our classrooms.”

Goodmark argued that banning “controversial issues” is too vague, so teachers may be unsure of what is permitted.

The district said it wants to fire Rinderle, in part, because administrators found her “uncoachable.”

“The school district has lost confidence in her, and part of that is her refusal to understand and acknowledge what she’s done,” Culves said, citing Rinderle’s failure to take responsibility for her actions and to apologize to parents and the school principal as additional reasons the district has lost confidence.

Rinderle repeatedly told Culves she did not know what parents’ beliefs were or what content might be considered offensive.

“Can you understand why a family might want the chance to discuss the topic of gender identity, gender fluidity or gender beyond binary with their children at home first, before it is introduced by a public school teacher?” Culves asked in her questioning.

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Culves argued that district policies meant Rinderle should have asked the principal to approve the book in advance and give parents the opportunity to opt their children out of the reading. Rinderle said it was not common practice to receive approval for picture books.

“This is not part of the curriculum, it’s not part of what we teach in fifth grade,” Due West Elementary Principal Cissi Kale said.

District officials said Rinderle should have known books were a sensitive area after parents previously complained when she read “Stacey’s Extraordinary Words,” a picture book about a spelling bee by then-gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, who was running as a Democrat. 

But Rinderle pushed back by saying her principal read Abrams’ book, told her there was nothing wrong with it and that she would handle complaints.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

CRISIS IN KENSINGTON: Drug users flood the streets of this lawless Philadelphia neighborhood

WARNING: This story contains graphic images.

PHILADELPHIA — Dozens of drug users were passed out along the sidewalks of Kensington Avenue on a gloomy August afternoon. Others stumbled through incoming traffic in the open-air drug market that’s ravaged one neighborhood in the City of Brotherly Love. 

Kensington has gained international infamy for its excessive public drug consumption. The area has become a hotspot for xylazine — a veterinary tranquilizer known as the zombie drug or tranq — which was found in over 90% of drug samples tested in Philadelphia in 2021, according to city data. 

In Kensington’s open-air drug market, users were passed out on the pavement, covered in scabbing or oozing flesh wounds from xylazine with fresh blood running down their arms from injecting themselves with needles. Some users were spotted wandering around in a stupor through a busy road. 

WATCH MORE FOX NEWS DIGITAL ORIGINALS HERE

One drug user, Gene, told Fox News he had just gotten out of the hospital after unknowingly taking xylazine. He had bandages on his legs covering multiple flesh-eating lesions covered in maggots.

The gruesome wounds from tranq can lead to serious infections, including necrosis, and can sometimes require amputation, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The drug can send its users into a trance or leave them unconscious for extended time periods, tranq users told Fox News. 

Duffy, another drug user, had a gaping wound on his arm from injecting tranq. He grew up in Kensington and has never seen the effects of drugs as extreme as xylazine’s.

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“It’s the worst I’ve ever seen it,” he said.

Xylazine has infiltrated the nation’s illicit drug supply, leaving many addicts unaware that they’re injecting a concoction containing tranq. And since xylazine isn’t an opioid, standard overdose reversal drugs are ineffective.

Maggie, a 30-year drug user living on the Kensington streets, previously told Fox News life was much better for users “when it was regular heroin” ravaging the area. Many of her friends have died from overdoses as the drugs have become more lethal in recent years, she said. 

“I’ve lost a lot of good friends,” she said. “People are just dying all around.”

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Before xylazine flooded Kensington, the neighborhood was already struggling to get a hold on the ongoing fentanyl epidemic. Before that, heroin plagued the drug-ridden community. 

Over 200,000 Americans have overdosed and died from synthetic opioids like fentanyl since 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In Pennsylvania, one user died of a drug overdose about every two hours in 2022, with nearly 80% of those deaths involving fentanyl, state data found.

“I see the drug addiction. You know, I see the drug dealing. I see the violence. I see the poverty,” Frank Rodriguez, a recovering heroin addict turned local activist, previously told Fox News about Kensington. “Most of all, I see pain.”

To see more of this open-air drug market in Philadelphia, click here

Bonus Bill – Ep. #425

Listen in on the jokes only Bill’s audience got to hear. 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The post Bonus Bill – Ep. #425 appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.

New comment by nazarewk in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (August 2023)"

Location: remote-only (Poland based, UTC+2 +/-3h)

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies: Kubernetes, CI/CD/automation, IaC (Terraform, Nix), cloud (AWS), linux (Arch, NixOS, Ubuntu, Amazon), shell (Bash, Fish), programming (Python, Go, learning/briefly touching many more)

Resume/CV: https://nc.nazarewk.pw/s/kY6AXbNMjNLxT9S

Email: see the CV

Hello, my name is Christopher. I am Kubernetes, anything-as-a-Code/automation and Development Experience enthusiast. I strive to gain at least basic know-how and finally build a platform/framework covering all aspects of application/services lifecycle which is simple to use, but not overengineered or too opinionated.

I can work with anything that lets me operate repeatable tools/services/processes reliably without repeating myself too much (surely not anything M$). My experience seems to be mostly with infrastructure as a code, Kubernetes ecosystem, CI/CD (process automation) and cloud AWS

I have 5 years experience with cloud/k8s/automation (CI/CD, DevEx etc.), backed by 4 years as a Python (Django) backend development and another ~4 years (throughout university) hobby sysadmin managing own ubuntu, then arch backed home router after tinkering with DD-WRT/Tomato backed routers throughout high school.

75 things for NASCAR's 75th anniversary: Best title fights

To celebrate NASCAR’s 75th anniversary, Ryan McGee presents a top-5 list every week for the rest of 2023. This week: the best title fights. The post 75 things for NASCAR's 75th anniversary: Best title fights appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.

Gym Class VR (YC W22) Is Hiring Unity Tooling Engineer

Article URL: https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/gym-class-by-irl-studios/jobs/futIIml-unity-engineer-tools Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37075064 Points: 1 # Comments: 0

SnapEDA (YC S15) is hiring AI lead for electronics copilot in Bay Area

Article URL: https://careers.snapeda.com/o/engineering-lead-ai

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37052137

Points: 1

# Comments: 0

Gym Class VR (YC W22) Is Hiring Unity Tooling Engineer

Article URL: https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/gym-class-by-irl-studios/jobs/futIIml-unity-engineer-tools

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37075064

Points: 1

# Comments: 0

Lewis Hamilton proud of Mercedes' car progress

Mercedes is still a step behind Red Bull but Lewis Hamilton has praised his team for the progress made since starting the season on the back foot.

The post Lewis Hamilton proud of Mercedes' car progress appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.

75 things for NASCAR's 75th anniversary: Best title fights

To celebrate NASCAR’s 75th anniversary, Ryan McGee presents a top-5 list every week for the rest of 2023. This week: the best title fights.

The post 75 things for NASCAR's 75th anniversary: Best title fights appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.