Teachers in at least one Florida county this week began removing or covering books in their classrooms to avoid running afoul of a new law requiring every volume to be vetted by a state-trained “media specialist”—violation of which could result in felony charges.
Because few if any books have been screened by media specialists, many Manatee County teachers erred on the side of caution and covered their entire classroom libraries. However, teachers and students found ways of resisting the new law, even as they took action to comply with it.
“Readers Gonna Read,” read one student-drawn sign taped to swaths of blue construction paper covering one middle school classroom’s library. “Free the Books,” demanded another. “There is no friend as loyal as a book,” asserted a third sign hanging below a notice designating the room’s “safe zone” in case of school shooter attack.
“A perfect picture of DeSantis’ Florida,” area elementary school teacher Tamara Solum wrote on Facebook.
Manatee Education Association President Pat Barber told the Herald-Tribune that “it’s a scary thing to have elementary teachers have to worry about being charged with a third-degree felony because of trying to help students develop a love of reading.”
In a final ironic twist, it’s Literacy Week in Florida schools, which according to the state’s Department of Education “is designed to raise awareness about the importance of reading and to inspire Florida’s students and families to make reading part of their daily routines.”