ANDERSON — The American Federation of Teachers (AFT) made a stop in Anderson Wednesday night, highlighting the importance of the upcoming mid-term election. They're on a 20-day nationwide, Get-Out-the-Vote tour leading up to November 8.
"You go back and think about the best teacher you ever had," Fedrick Ingram, AFT's Secretary & Treasurer, said to the crowd gathered at the UAW Hall.
On the tour, AFT is highlighting what they believe kids and communities need in their elected leaders.
"Somebody who cares, you have to have the heart for education. You have to know what it takes to educate kids," Ingram said. "Our public schools have been politicized, so our power lies in the ballot box. We've got to elect officials that support our public schools."
WRTV has reported extensively on the national group Free to Learn Coalition creating deceptive school board candidate websites, with partisan information, for certain districts in our area. While it's not happening in Anderson, local AFT President Randy Harrison, says the same political rhetoric has found its way into their school board races.
"I call it the CRT boogeyman. The stick figures. The accusations that our public's schools are teaching things that that we're not," Harrison said.
He teaches senior government classes. Harrison used the misinformation flying around as a teaching moment for his kids, posing this question to them.
"Raise your hands if a teacher in Anderson Community Schools has taught you how to be gay or any of the horrible things this false information says about us? Not one hand went up," Harrison said.
The problem, Harrison fears, will come if community members believe partisan claims about school board candidates.
"If they make those misconceptions about us and win, then tell us we can't teacher the truth about slavery, the 3/5 Compromise or other things not comfortable in our past and we don't teach it anymore, we'll forget that and go backwards. That's my concern," Harrison said.
-
3 shot, 1 killed on Indy’s northwest side
Three people were shot, leaving one of them dead, on the northwest side of Indianapolis on Thursday night.7 residents displaced; dog dies in house fire on Indy’s north side
Seven people were displaced, and a dog died in a house fire on the north side of Indianapolis on Thursday.Ruoff Music Center to now require parking passes for on-site parking
If bought online in advance, parking options start at $20. Buying parking passes on the day of the show will start at $25. There are other options for VIP parking.Local AI company could change how packages are delivered and stored
Arrive AI would allow drones to drop a delivery in a secure mailbox. The box is climate-controlled and password-protected.