In response to the increasing wave of state laws restricting literature related to race, gender, and LGBTQ+ themes in educational settings, Scholastic, a renowned publisher of children’s books, unveiled an optional collection with “woke” books.
According to EducationWeek, scholastic introduced “Share Every Story, Celebrate Every Voice,” housing 64 titles that touch upon LGBTQ+ characters, civil rights activists, and people of color. The distinctiveness of this collection is that it allows elementary schools hosting Scholastic book fairs to choose whether to include or exclude these books from their offerings.
In the past year, Texas has taken the lead in banning books from school libraries, surpassing all other states in the nation. According to a recent analysis by PEN America, a nonprofit organization dedicated to championing free speech, the state’s targets have included books focusing on race, racism, abortion, and LGBTQ representation and issues.
PEN America found 3,362 instances of book banning at K-12 schools during the 2022-23 school year, up 33% from the previous year. In March, The Houston Chronicle compiled a detailed list of the challenges that were being made to school libraries and revealed that since the term “critical race theory” became widely utilized to oppose teaching about racism, the labor movement, gender identity, and sexual orientation, challenges, and bans sharply skyrocketed. In 2017, only five books were challenged and none were removed. By 2021, the challenges had reached 29 and the removals 19.
Earlier in the month, Scholastic demonstrated its opposition to book bans by signing an open letter drafted by PEN America. However, the publisher’s recent press release suggests that, given the increasing prevalence of restrictive legislation, their options were limited. Scholastic felt compelled to make books related to race, gender, or sexuality optional in their book fair collection or not offer them at all.
“We don’t pretend this solution is perfect—but the other option would be to not offer these books at all—which is not something we’d consider,” the press release read.
Here is the complete list of Scholastic’s separate collection provided by EdW:
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