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Bibliographic Details
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1962
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED033923
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collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Students' Right to Read. Academic Freedom Censorship Civil Liberties Educational Environment English Instruction Library Material Selection Literature Moral Issues Reading Material Selection Teaching Conditions Individuals and groups are exerting increasing pressures on American schools to restrict student access to important and worthwhile books. The success of these attempts at censorship has resulted in teachers being reprimanded, books being removed from libraries and classrooms, and subsequent attacks being expanded to include areas much larger than the target schools. With this danger of censorship, American citizens must be made aware of their rights to read, based on the fundamental democratic assumption that free men possess powers of discrimination and should determine their own actions. Librarians, teachers of English, and school administrators should prepare to protect the students' right to read by (1) establishing a committee of English teachers who, with the approval of the school administration, can determine book selection policy and screen complaints, and (2) fostering a community climate in which citizens will support the freedom to read. (JM)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED033923
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1962
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Students' Right to Read.
Academic Freedom
Censorship
Civil Liberties
Educational Environment
English Instruction
Library Material Selection
Literature
Moral Issues
Reading Material Selection
Teaching Conditions
The Students' Right to Read. Academic Freedom Censorship Civil Liberties Educational Environment English Instruction Library Material Selection Literature Moral Issues Reading Material Selection Teaching Conditions Individuals and groups are exerting increasing pressures on American schools to restrict student access to important and worthwhile books. The success of these attempts at censorship has resulted in teachers being reprimanded, books being removed from libraries and classrooms, and subsequent attacks being expanded to include areas much larger than the target schools. With this danger of censorship, American citizens must be made aware of their rights to read, based on the fundamental democratic assumption that free men possess powers of discrimination and should determine their own actions. Librarians, teachers of English, and school administrators should prepare to protect the students' right to read by (1) establishing a committee of English teachers who, with the approval of the school administration, can determine book selection policy and screen complaints, and (2) fostering a community climate in which citizens will support the freedom to read. (JM)
title The Students' Right to Read.
topic Academic Freedom
Censorship
Civil Liberties
Educational Environment
English Instruction
Library Material Selection
Literature
Moral Issues
Reading Material Selection
Teaching Conditions
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED033923