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How Controversy And Current Events Become Critical Curriculum In Some Oklahoma Classrooms

Students at Luther High School watch Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream Speech" before a class discussion.
Emily Wendler
/
StateImpact Oklahoma
Students at Luther High School watch Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream Speech" before a class discussion.

Polls suggest this is one of the the most politically divided moments in American history. There are now tip sheets on how to survive Thanksgiving without disowning your family, and the comment sections of online news articles are full of vitriol.

Schools are not immune to the tension, but not everyone thinks that’s a bad thing.

Some Oklahoma teachers, like Rhonda Hlavaty, are actually asking their students to discuss controversial topics in class. Hlavaty, who teaches English at Luther High School, uses current events to help her students learn how to have discussions and, potentially, disagree with their classmates.

“If we don’t begin to figure out how to work with one another and live with one another in our communities, it’s just going to get uglier,” she says. “I’ve never seen it as ugly.”

After a recent class lesson on the Gettysburg Address, the Preamble to the Constitution, and Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have A Dream” speech, Hlavaty asked her students to form a circle and discuss the texts’ theme of equality, and what it means to them in 2017.

“This is a conversation for us to get out our ideas about what is happening in this country now, what was happening then,” she told her class.

Hlavaty reminds her class the discussion exercise is a conversation, not a debate, and that respect is a priority. After some prompting, her students open up.

‘Touchy’ subjects

Jacob Rosecrants, a former history teacher at Roosevelt Middle School in Oklahoma City, also felt the need to talk about current events with his students. His students, however, were the ones who proposed daily discussion topics.

“The first thing that came up really big was Charlottesville, and that was a touchy subject,” he says.

Rosecrants just won a special election for a House seat in Norman, so he’s at the state capitol now and no longer in the classroom. When Rosecrants was teacher, he tackled Charlottesville by talking about the protest and its response, teaching a class lesson about the Civil War, and the statue at the center of the fight. He then turned the discussion over to the students and let them share their thoughts.

“Sometimes you’ll have to be careful because some kids will want to dominate the conversation,” he says, a problem he solved with a toy ball the kids tossed around to signify each student’s turn to talk.

“I’ll open it up to everybody else by having a little ball where if a kid is done answering a question they can throw it to somebody else.”

Eventually, the students were so interested in the news, Rosecrants started devoting Fridays to class discussions about current events. Overall, he says, the conversations were civil.

Luther High School teacher Rhonda Hlavaty.
Credit Emily Wendler / StateImpact Oklahoma
/
StateImpact Oklahoma
Luther High School teacher Rhonda Hlavaty.

Civil skills

University of Pennsylvania education researcher Jonathan Zimmerman says more teachers need to follow the example set by Hlavaty and Rosecrants. In his new book, The Case For Contention, he argues the country’s fading ability to discuss controversial issues is part of the reason the nation is so divided.

“We are now in our country talking past each other,” he says. “We’ve in many places, lost, or at least diminished, the ability to disagree.”

Zimmerman says schools are a good place to reinstate some of these skills.

“We are so polarized,” he says, “We’ve given our young people such poor models of what political dialogue is, that we need our schools to teach a better way.”

Zimmerman says teachers should not indoctrinate students with their own point of views, but rather help kids work through their feelings, do research, and guide civil class discussions.

“Asking people what they believe, asking people why they believe it, asking people why they disagree, asking people if they could find room for compromise: These are all things that we need to teach,” he says.

Leave politics to parents?

Not everybody agrees. Some teachers are actually told to avoid controversy and current events.

After a white police officer from Ferguson, Mo., shot and killed Michael Brown, who was black, a local superintendent told his teachers to change the subject if kids brought it up. Horace Mann, a leading figure in the creation of public schools, is even quoted as being against contention in the classroom:

“If the day ever arrives when the school room shall become a cauldron for the fermentation of all the hot and virulent opinions, in politics and religion, that now agitate our community,” Mann wrote in 1844, “the fate of our glorious school system will be sealed, and speedy ruin will overwhelm it.”

Others say teachers should just stick to core subjects and leave politics to parents.

Zimmerman understands where they’re coming from.

“They’re afraid the teacher will have a different predilection from theirs, and that the teacher will try to force or indoctrinate that predilection on the kids,” he says.

StateImpact Oklahoma is a partnership among Oklahoma’s public radio stations and relies on contributions from readers and listeners to fulfill its mission of public service to Oklahoma and beyond. Donate online.

As a community-supported news organization, KGOU relies on contributions from readers and listeners to fulfill its mission of public service to Oklahoma and beyond. Donate online, or by contacting our Membership department.

In graduate school at the University of Montana, Emily Wendler focused on Environmental Science and Natural Resource reporting with an emphasis on agriculture. About halfway through her Master’s program a professor introduced her to radio and she fell in love. She has since reported for KBGA, the University of Montana’s college radio station and Montana’s PBS Newsbrief. She was a finalist in a national in-depth radio reporting competition for an investigatory piece she produced on campus rape. She also produced in-depth reports on wind energy and local food for Montana Public Radio. She is very excited to be working in Oklahoma City, and you can hear her work on all things from education to agriculture right here on KOSU.
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