![]() His kids, he added, seemed confused about what would make a book inappropriate for school. “But I read books about the consequences of this kind of thing when I was in school.” He was thinking of “ Fahrenheit 451” and “ 1984,” he said. (He also went to another local school and later uploaded a video to Twitter showing that its shelves were bare.) “This has never been an issue before,” Covey told me, noting that he’d grown up in the same public-school system, in Duval County, which includes Jacksonville. “They even took that book,” Covey said.Ĭovey went into the school classrooms to see what his children were talking about and found bookshelves papered over to hide the books. Students who read from a list of pre-selected books, including this one, were rewarded with an ice-cream party. Covey’s son had been reading “ Measuring Up,” a coming-of-age story about an immigrant to the United States from Taiwan. “They took all the books out of the classrooms.” Covey asked which books. ![]() “Did you hear what happened at school today?” his daughter asked. ![]() ![]() Brian Covey, an entrepreneur in his late thirties, came to pick up his daughter, who’s in second grade, and his son, who’s in fifth. In late January, at Greenland Pines Elementary, kids attended a party for an annual event called Celebrate Literacy Week, Florida! There was an escape room and food trucks. ![]()
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