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The Language Police
The Language Police: How Pressure Groups Restrict What Students Learn | Diane Ravitch
1 post | 4 read | 1 to read
If you’re an actress or a coed just trying to do a man-size job, a yes-man who turns a deaf ear to some sob sister, an heiress aboard her yacht, or a bookworm enjoying a boy’s night out, Diane Ravitch’s internationally acclaimed The Language Police has bad news for you: Erase those words from your vocabulary! Textbook publishers and state education agencies have sought to root out racist, sexist, and elitist language in classroom and library materials. But according to Diane Ravitch, a leading historian of education, what began with the best of intentions has veered toward bizarre extremes. At a time when we celebrate and encourage diversity, young readers are fed bowdlerized texts, devoid of the references that give these works their meaning and vitality. With forceful arguments and sensible solutions for rescuing American education from the pressure groups that have made classrooms bland and uninspiring, The Language Police offers a powerful corrective to a cultural scandal. From the Trade Paperback edition.
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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Ok ladies...what strikes your fancy for this summer? Have you read any of these yet? Any on your radar already? I‘ll tag them all below so you can read the descriptions. 😉

#NForNonfiction

See All 22 Comments
tjwill I‘ve read Freedom Writers. Of the others, I‘m leaning toward Chernobyl, Timbuktu, and Language Police. 6y
rjsthumbelina I have been wanting to read The Language Police. And I own the audiobook of The Badass Librarians of Timbuktu 6y
keithmalek I'm not a lady, but I've read (and thoroughly enjoyed) The World Without Us. 6y
daniwithtea I‘ve read Timbuktu. The rest sound really great! 6y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @keithmalek That‘s ok! I‘m glad to know you liked it. I‘ll read all of them eventually, but our group for a book exchange just happens to include all ladies this time, so I was trying to pick something no one‘s read yet or already owns. 6y
keithmalek Whoops. I didn't see all the tagged people. 6y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @keithmalek Again, that‘s ok, a bunch of extra people chimed in too, nothing is really private here, and I love the input. In my real life a few read, but almost none read nonfiction, so it‘s great to talk about them with other people who have read them. 6y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @daniwithtea @tjwill @Riveted_Reader_Melissa My first choice is The World Without Us. I read the Craft book so long ago that I‘d reread if people were interested. I think Reds is too long for a round robin read (700+ pages). If we read the Pun book, then Language Police is a LOT of language-related reading. So maybe save one of them for another round. Voices from Chernobyl sounds deeply depressing. 6y
tjwill @BarbaraTheBibliophage I‘d be up for The World Without Us too. 6y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa So @BarbaraTheBibliophage @tjwill @daniwithtea Is that The World Without Us Then? Just double checking... 6y
BarbaraTheBibliophage I think so, yes! 6y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @BarbaraTheBibliophage I thought I better check since I didn‘t have a consensus at first, if not I had a plan B waiting in the wings. 😉 6y
daniwithtea @Riveted_Reader_Melissa sounds good to me! 6y
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