On the matter of Common Core,
Employees of at least one school have been directed not to express opinions in public or by texts, email, social media or traditional media, according to notes taken at a faculty meeting last week that were obtained by The Town Talk.
[Rapides Superintendent Nason “Tony”] Authement said there is not a district policy about social media.
“We are not communicating any procedures, policies or expectations about posting on social networks,” he said.
Of course. Instead,
Local teachers who agreed to speak to The Town Talk anonymously said these directives normally are given orally rather than in writing. The notes came from a faculty meeting after teacher Cher Wilson spoke to a TV news outlet about what she called a “dishonest” grading system.
One teacher said she was “written up” by school administration for writing a comment from her personal Facebook account on a negative post about the Common Core State Standards. The comment was against the standards.
She said she was shocked when asked to remove her comment, which she did, and then was written up.
“We are not to voice our opinions in any public forum,” she said. “We are to be neutral or in favor of…. This is a hot national debate. Why can’t I comment?
And
She said teachers have been told not to talk to the press without going through the chain of command, which begins with the principal and ends with the superintendent.
Plainly, the plebes are free to speak only what has been approved by their Betters for them to speak.