Advertisement

San Francisco school lesson plan labels Donald Trump a ‘racist and sexist man’

The lesson plan says that Trump won the election by pandering to a racist and sexist base.
The lesson plan says that Trump won the election by pandering to a racist and sexist base. AP Photo/Michael Conroy

San Francisco‘s public schools have been offered a classroom lesson plan that calls President-elect Donald Trump a racist, sexist man who became president “by pandering to a huge racist and sexist base.”

The union that represents city teachers posted the plan on its website and distributed it via an email newsletter to its more than 6,000 members. The school district has more than 57,000 students.

READ MORE: Donald Trump denies he is racist, tells Clinton ‘shame on you’

It is unclear how many teachers have used the plan outlined by a Mission High School teacher, but it appears to have the tacit support of city education officials.

School district spokeswoman Gentle Blythe said the plan is optional and not part of the official curriculum.

Story continues below advertisement

“Educators are entrusted to create lessons that reflect the California standards, support students’ social and emotional well-being and foster inclusive and safe school communities,” she said in a statement that neither praised nor rebuked the lesson plan. San Francisco schools serve diverse populations and teachers are encouraged to include multiple perspectives in lessons, she said.

READ MORE: Most young Americans think Donald Trump is ‘racist’, poll finds

The Republican Party in San Francisco reacted with stronger words.

“It’s inappropriate on every level,” said Harmeet Dhillon, an RNC committeewoman from California. She called it “inappropriate propaganda that unfairly demonizes not only the campaign that Donald Trump won but also all of the people who voted for him.”

For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.

Get breaking National news

For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

The lesson plan was written by social studies teacher Fakhra Shah, who said she hadn’t planned for it to spread citywide – that was a step taken by the teacher’s union. She wrote it at 2 a.m. Nov. 9, just hours after results came in, to help teachers at her school struggling with how to answer students’ questions and concerns about Trump becoming president.

VIDEO: Black Texas student told ‘no n–gers allowed on the sidewalk’ by Trump supporter

Click to play video: 'Black Texas student told ‘no n–gers allowed on the sidewalk’ by Trump supporter'
Black Texas student told ‘no n–gers allowed on the sidewalk’ by Trump supporter

“I think a lot of people were lost for words, wondering, ‘What do we say? What do we do?’ ” said Shah, whose Latino, African American, white, Muslim and LGBTQ students are worried about a surge in hate crimes since the election. “To be honest, I was not at a loss for words.”

Story continues below advertisement

“We’re calling him out,” she said. “If he’s our president, I have the right to hold him accountable and ask him to take a stance that is anti-hate and anti-racist.”

The four-page plan’s introduction includes this guidance: “Let us please not sidestep the fact that a racist and sexist man has become the president of our country by pandering to a huge racist and sexist base.”

READ MORE: ‘Go back to your f–ing country’: Videos show racist altercation on Toronto streetcar

It encourages teachers to let students express their concerns and to offer them hope and tell students that they can keep fighting.

“Tell them: ‘We do not have to go anywhere, not Canada, not ‘back’ to any place we came from,” it says, suggesting that students stand up and express their thoughts, concerns and fears. “We can uplift ourselves (and) fight oppression here at school even if we cannot control the rest of the country.”

About 2,000 San Francisco students walked out of class last week to protest the new president. On Monday, Mayor Ed Lee declared that San Francisco would continue to provide sanctuary for all immigrants, religious minorities and gays and lesbians.

READ MORE: Paul Ryan calls Donald Trump’s attack on judge textbook ‘racist comment’

The union that represents teachers, the United Educators of San Francisco, defended the plan.

Story continues below advertisement

Union President Lita Blanc said that even House Speaker Paul Ryan had called Trump’s campaign racist and sexist.

“There is a time and a place for using words that match action,” Blanc said. She praised the plan’s advice for students – “to stand up and defend themselves, and speak out for themselves and make a difference.”

Sponsored content

AdChoices