California Educator

August/September 2023

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A F T E R M O R E T H A N eight months of unrest and community division, students, parents, educators and Temecula Valley Educators Association ( T VEA) filed suit against the school board majority that injected culture wars and chaos into an award-winning school district. Under the guidance of non- profit legal organization Public Counsel, T VEA joined with Temecula Valley parents, stu- dents and individual teachers in a lawsuit against Temecula Valley Unified School District (T VUSD) in early August. They believe the school board violated the law in adopting its resolution in December 2022 banning the teaching of race-related topics. " T VEA joined the lawsuit to guard against the negative impacts to Temecula students and educators TVEA members Jennifer Scharf (at mic), Dawn Murray- Sibby and Amy Eytchison at the press conference announcing the lawsuit. Local Joins Parents, Students, Teachers in Lawsuit Temecula Valley Educators Association stands up to district for accurate curriculum and against teacher mistreatment By Ed Sibby in the classroom," said Edgar Díaz, T VEA president. "In the months following the resolution's implementation, we've seen its broad and vague language used as a weapon against educators. Educators are identified and harassed on social media and classroom voicemails with horrible accusations that go against the nature of our service to the students of Temecula." Diaz noted that T VUSD's current board majority has created a chilling atmosphere where teachers' choosing the "wrong" book results in being removed from the classroom. " Teachers have had their reputations irreparably harmed — one for incorporating a school library book in a project, others for serving as student advi- sors to clubs and guiding students to focus on school attendance while balancing students' First Amendment rights," he said. " The inability to facilitate academic discussions based on student ideas is causing educators to worry about discipline and their jobs." Educator thoughts of reprisal are con- stant and palpable, according to Dawn Murray-Sibby, a high school teacher, T VEA member and one of the plaintiffs in the case: " This ban has created a climate of fear in our classrooms, and it is preventing my students from learning about the history and diversity of our nation. I'm proud to be a plaintiff in this case to fight for my students, who deserve an education not censored by board members' ideological beliefs." At the heart of the decision to participate in the lawsuit is what T VEA, comprised of 1,300 members, believes is best for both students and members to provide the stellar education for which T VUSD is known. T VEA believes the school board's priorities are misguided and illegal, and it is students, parents and educators who are impacted the most. "This ban created a climate of fear in our classrooms. It is preventing my students from learning about the history and diversity of our nation." —T VEA member Dawn Murray-Sibby 42 cta.org Advocacy

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