Public School Teaching: Where Food Comes From
Posted: Wed Dec 17, 2014 1:25 am
Hi, the recent thread from another member got me wondering how free speech laws (in the U.S., but also elsewhere) affect which media public school teachers are allowed to show, and allowed to permit their students to show, in class. I went to junior high in California, where a teacher showed our class the entire film "Glory," which included a scene where a black man is whipped severely, and depictions of killing in war, and no one seemed to have a problem with that violence being shown to twelve and thirteen-year-olds. Many undercover factory farm videos aren't more violent than that, but I suspect that more teachers would hesitate to show them, or their school principals would not even permit it.
I work in an elementary school, where an older student often talks to me about food, asking questions and commenting on what we're having for lunch, which vitamins are in which foods, and where foods come from. He commented that his meat comes from an animal. When an aide heard me say that the meat comes from people killing an animal by cutting its throat or shooting it in the head, the aide stood up with her eyes wide (probably dilated pupils), and she said that she thinks it's inappropriate of me to the tell the student and that his parents need to know what he's being told. I said, "It's factual information." I gestured to my veggies and asked if she thinks it's inappropriate to say where they come from. She said no, because it's not sharing gruesome details. She had already finished her meal, but I would understand if she objected for their own personal reasons, such as losing her appetite, feeling guilty about what she's supporting the moment she bites into a chopped up carcass. But that wasn't the objection. (Note: I had never brought up where animal foods come from while anyone is eating before and don't intend to make a habit of it, but that wasn't the issue.)
I wonder if it's like with sex education in public schools, where the schools I know of here in California where I live and grew up require a parent permission slip for teachers to teach that. However, I have never heard of any school that requires a parent permission slip for teachers to teach where food comes from. Maybe that's because many public school teachers have a very limited idea of where animals foods come from and nutrition in general, mixed with advertising-induced myths and misleading information in food pyramid posters they put up on classroom walls, and also lack a desire to share where animal foods come from.
Does anyone else on the site work with children in a school? Any public school teachers here or other school employees (like school psychologists, school speech therapists, etc.)? Do you just stay silent about the topic of where animal foods come from if a child directly asks you or brings up the topic? Do you stay silent when you hear other teacher's spread misinformation about nutrition, teaching their students that they "need" meat to get protein and "need" milk to get calcium?
In an interview, Gary Yourofsky said that when he's invited to a kindergarten, first grade or second grade class to give a speech, the teachers tell him that he can't say how the animals are killed. In the interview, he said that he breaks the teachers' rules every time. I wonder if any teachers have actually stopped him during his lectures or told him that he can't say that without parent permission slips. (Here's the short interview, about three min.: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NDvN5iXLcE)
I'd be interested in what other people think about the freedom of speech that people have in schools relating to the origins of our food, especially meat and dairy.
Kelly
I work in an elementary school, where an older student often talks to me about food, asking questions and commenting on what we're having for lunch, which vitamins are in which foods, and where foods come from. He commented that his meat comes from an animal. When an aide heard me say that the meat comes from people killing an animal by cutting its throat or shooting it in the head, the aide stood up with her eyes wide (probably dilated pupils), and she said that she thinks it's inappropriate of me to the tell the student and that his parents need to know what he's being told. I said, "It's factual information." I gestured to my veggies and asked if she thinks it's inappropriate to say where they come from. She said no, because it's not sharing gruesome details. She had already finished her meal, but I would understand if she objected for their own personal reasons, such as losing her appetite, feeling guilty about what she's supporting the moment she bites into a chopped up carcass. But that wasn't the objection. (Note: I had never brought up where animal foods come from while anyone is eating before and don't intend to make a habit of it, but that wasn't the issue.)
I wonder if it's like with sex education in public schools, where the schools I know of here in California where I live and grew up require a parent permission slip for teachers to teach that. However, I have never heard of any school that requires a parent permission slip for teachers to teach where food comes from. Maybe that's because many public school teachers have a very limited idea of where animals foods come from and nutrition in general, mixed with advertising-induced myths and misleading information in food pyramid posters they put up on classroom walls, and also lack a desire to share where animal foods come from.
Does anyone else on the site work with children in a school? Any public school teachers here or other school employees (like school psychologists, school speech therapists, etc.)? Do you just stay silent about the topic of where animal foods come from if a child directly asks you or brings up the topic? Do you stay silent when you hear other teacher's spread misinformation about nutrition, teaching their students that they "need" meat to get protein and "need" milk to get calcium?
In an interview, Gary Yourofsky said that when he's invited to a kindergarten, first grade or second grade class to give a speech, the teachers tell him that he can't say how the animals are killed. In the interview, he said that he breaks the teachers' rules every time. I wonder if any teachers have actually stopped him during his lectures or told him that he can't say that without parent permission slips. (Here's the short interview, about three min.: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NDvN5iXLcE)
I'd be interested in what other people think about the freedom of speech that people have in schools relating to the origins of our food, especially meat and dairy.
Kelly