Academic freedom and free speech are essential. Universities must protect them.
In the face of unprecedented attacks, Texans of all backgrounds showed up this year as visionary leaders.
We can't let our politicians dictate what we read — so this holiday season, consider gifting a banned book to your friends and loved ones.
By Ms. P
We’re demanding change by filing a complaint with the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights.
The same lawmakers banning books and censoring curricula now want to dictate what students worship.
By Rev. Erin Walter
We're appealing the convictions of three community organizers in Gainesville, Texas, who were sentenced to jail for peacefully protesting.
Students and parents in Magnolia Independent School District can breathe a sigh of relief that the district’s archaic, discriminatory dress code is a thing of the past.
By Brian Klosterboer
The challenges of 2021 are widely known, yet this year also had its bright spots.
By Erik W. Martínez Resly
This year’s Banned Books Week (Sept. 26-Oct. 2) has a renewed importance to me and the community of students I serve. You see, I’m a librarian at a public, inner-city high school in Houston. I’ve been an educator and librarian for more than 15 years. I’d like to think that I know what my kids like and need in the safe space I try to create for them through the library and all of its resources. But I sometimes worry about pressures on school communities to censor and exclude certain kinds of information that we as educators strive to teach our kids, especially the ones that most need to see themselves in the materials they consume. What’s important for people to remember is that it’s not just books that are being censored, but any kind of information that can shape a narrative or idea, from a speaker invited to give a talk, to an LGBTQ Pride flag hanging in a window. School districts in Texas are notorious for a more traditional form of idea censorship through the act of officially banning books from school libraries or book club lists. Earlier this year, 13 books were banned from school reading lists in the Leander Independent School District just outside of Austin. Some parents complained about books depicting sexual acts, violence, or profanity — all things that can be accessed in microseconds on a teenager’s smart phone. The situation got so tenuous that a school board member recently resigned.
By Christy S.
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