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Post Reports

Reported by her own students for a lesson on race

Post Reports

The Washington Post

Daily News, Politics, News

4.45.1K Ratings

🗓️ 14 September 2023

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Last spring, South Carolina English teacher Mary Wood was horrified when her students reported her to the local school board for teaching about race. As she starts a new school year, we ask what it’s like for her to step back into the classroom. 


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Last spring in Chapin, S.C., two students in high school English teacher Mary Wood‘s class reported her to the local school board for teaching about race. Wood had assigned her all-White AP English Language and Composition class readings from Ta-Nehisi Coates’s “Between the World and Me,” a book that examines what it means to be Black in America.


In emails, the students complained that the book made them ashamed to be White, violating a South Carolina rule that forbids teachers from making students “feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress” on account of their race.


Wood’s case drew national, polarizing attention. Conservative outlets and commentators decried Wood’s “race-shaming against White people.” Left-leaning media declared her a martyr to “cancel culture,” the latest casualty of raging debates over how to teach race, racism and history that have engulfed the country since the coronavirus pandemic began.


Wood is not the first teacher to get caught in the crossfire: The Post previously reported that at least 160 educators have lost their positions since the pandemic began because of political debates. 


South Carolina is one of 18 states to restrict education on race since 2021, according to an Education Week tally. And at least half the country has passed laws that limit instruction on race, history, sex or gender identity, according to a Washington Post analysis


Today, as a new school year begins, education reporter Hannah Natanson talks to Wood about what it’s like for her to return to teaching, and whether she feels she can trust her students again.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.9

So recently I was in South Carolina

0:02.9

to spend some time with an English teacher named Marywood.

0:05.7

Hannah Nathanson covers education for the post.

0:08.7

And I wanted to talk to this teacher because last spring,

0:12.1

she was reported to the school board

0:13.8

for teaching about race, reported, reported.

0:21.4

She was teaching Ta-Nehisi Kota's book

0:23.4

between the world and me.

0:24.9

It's a National Book Award winner,

0:26.5

a Pulitzer Prize finalist and a bestseller.

0:30.3

It's part memoir, part history,

0:32.4

and part letter to Kota's adolescent son.

0:35.8

She was reported to the school board

0:37.8

and that led to the book being pulled from her classroom

0:40.2

and very public outrage at a following school board meeting.

0:44.8

There's plenty of other subject material out there.

0:47.0

These topics are very uncomfortable and inappropriate.

0:49.5

There should be a colorblind society.

0:51.3

America is not systemically racist.

0:53.5

I implore you to put policies in place

0:56.9

that implement the banning of CRT and teachers,

1:01.7

penalties for teachers.

...

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