Were Girls Who Code s Books Banned Details on Controversy

Were Girls Who Code s Books Banned Details on Controversy

Were Girls Who Code's Books Banned? Details on ControversyHome > News > Human InterestSource: CNN Business/YouTube Pennsylvania School District Allegedly Banned Girls Who Code BooksBy Dan ClarendonSep. 27 2022, Published 3:13 p.m. ET Amid the larger controversy around literary censorship in schools, people are specifically wondering why Girls Who Code books would be banned. Girls Who Code, an organization supporting female representation in computer science, collaborated with Penguin Random House on a series of middle-grade books centering on girls forming friendships while coding.Article continues below advertisement But PEN America, a nonprofit devoted to protecting free expression, recently reported that Central York School District in Pennsylvania had banned all four books in the series: The Friendship Code; Team BFF: Race to the Finish!; Lights, Music, Code!; and Spotlight on Coding Club. The Girls Who Code books are among more than 400 books the Central York School District has banned according to PEN America Source: Penguin Random House Cover of 'Team BFF: Race to the Finish!' PEN America listed the four Girls Who Code book in its latest Index of School Book Bans, which “instances where students’ access to books in school libraries and classrooms in the United States was restricted or diminished for either limited or indefinite periods of time, from July 1, 2021, through June 30, 2022.”Article continues below advertisement According to that index, all four Girls Who Code books were banned in classrooms in the Central York School District. The index also reports that same school district had banned more than 400 books. According to Insider, a spokesperson for the Central York School District said that the ban had been in effect for 10 months before getting reversed in September 2021. Girls Who Code founder Reshma Saujani said she was shocked by what she called a direct attack on the movement Speaking to Insider, Girls Who Code founder Reshma Saujani said that she was “just shocked” to hear reports of the ban. “This is about controlling women, and it starts with controlling our girls and what info they have access to,” she said.Article continues below advertisement I woke up this morning to a news alert that our @GirlsWhoCode middle-grade book series was banned by some school districts as part of the Mom for Liberty effort to ban books. To be honest, I am so angry I cannot breathe.https://t.co/5rBJkcGQDV— reshmasaujani (@reshmasaujani) September 24, 2022 Reshma went on: “We use these stories to teach kids to code. It felt very much like a direct attack on the movement we’ve been building to get girls coding. … You cannot be what you cannot see. They don’t want girls to learn how to code because that’s a way to be economically secure.”Article continues below advertisement The school board however claims the Girls Who Code book series hadn' t been banned Officials from the Central York School District responded to the controversy on Monday, Sept. 26, saying in a statement that the Insider article had “categorically false” information and claiming that the Girls Who Code books “[have] not been banned, and they remain available in our libraries,” according to The Guardian. A representative from the school district told Newsweek that the Girls Who Code series “was included in a Diversity Resource List, along with approximately 200 other resources, that was removed from the Central York School District in November of 2020.”Article continues below advertisement The rep added: “The Girls Who Code series remained in circulation from November 2020 to September 2021 when the Diversity Resource List was reinstated by the Central York School District Board of Directors.”Article continues below advertisement In a September 2021 statement about the decision to pull the list of diversity resources, Jane Johnson, the Central York school board president at the time, said, “What we are attempting to do is balance legitimate academic freedom with what could be literature/materials that are too activist in nature, and may lean more toward indoctrination rather than age-appropriate academic content.” After the release of the latest Index of School Book Bans, PEN America CEO Suzanne Nossel pointed Newsweek to its online tip sheet about fighting book banks. “We want students to recognize they have a stake in fighting for their rights under the Constitution and the freedom to read,” she told the magazine.AdvertisementMore from Distractify This One Scene Got ‘Looking for Alaska’ on the Banned Books List A Virginia Legislator Is Trying to Sue Barnes & Noble Over the Sale Of "Obscene Books" 'Harry Potter' Books Banned from School Library Because They Contain 'Curses and Spells' Latest Human Interest News and UpdatesAdvertisementABOUT DistractifyAbout UsPrivacy PolicyTerms of UseDMCASitemapCONNECT with DistractifyLink to Facebook Link to TwitterLink to InstagramContact us by Email Copyright 2022 Distractify. Distractify is a registered trademark. All Rights Reserved. People may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.
Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!