Subject: RE: Spectator coverage of a current issue Date: Thu, 12 May 2005 09:00:26 -0500 Message-ID: <376546015E56D640AB10F112B8127DDF0131E31B@PEPSI.uwec.edu> From: "Wesenberg, Nancy Christine" <WESENBNC@uwec.edu>
Just for your information, The board of directors of the LGBT Center of
the Chippewa has crafted a letter in support of Beth Franklin which will
be delivered to the School Board and the L-T today. N. Wesenberg
________________________________
From: sfpj-request@listserve.uwec.edu
[mailto:sfpj-request@listserve.uwec.edu] On Behalf Of Hale, C. Kate
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2005 8:19 AM
To: SFPJ
Subject: FW: Spectator coverage of a current issue
Colleagues,
This is disheartening-the rally at Clairemont yesterday was well
attended and the energy there was good. But this response, these
additional comments from Mr. Bennett, really troubles me.
We need to stay alert and to be prepared to act as necessary.
Kate Hale
English
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From: "Phillips, William H." <philliwh@uwec.edu>
Date: Thu, 12 May 2005 06:42:16 -0500
To: "ENGL.STAFF" <ENGL.STAFF@uwec.edu>
Subject: Spectator coverage of a current issue
The Spectator - Campus News
Issue: 5/12/05
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Discussion, photo of student angers parents
By Karline Koehler
Eau Claire community members are divided after a local high school
teacher showed photographs of transgendered UW-Eau Claire senior Jessica
Janiuk's face as part of a discussion about lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgendered people.
On April 14, Memorial High School English teacher Beth Franklin showed
classes photos of Janiuk's face before and after (see photo) her sex
change. The lesson took place during the Day of Silence, an event "to
recognize and protest the discrimination and harassment" against LGBT
people.
During the discussion, one student walked out of the classroom. His
father, Neal Bennett, filed a complaint against the school board,
stating the situation constituted harassment.
"She's taking her own agenda and she is forcing it on the students,"
Bennett said. "It doesn't matter what that agenda is - if it's a
controversial issue, that's wrong."
Franklin is the adviser for GLASS, Memorial's LGBT student group. She
declined to comment for this article.
"This whole incident is the very reason that the Day of Silence even
exists," Janiuk said. "This is an attempt of a large community to
silence minority groups. I won't stand by and let that happen."
That's why Janiuk organized a rally in support of Franklin Wednesday at
the corner of Keith Street and Clairemont Avenue.
"Her lesson was in line with all the policies of the school," Janiuk
said. "The problem here is ignorance. It's not bigotry; it's not hate
speech. The only way to fight ignorance is through education."
However, Bennett said he believes such discussions can be harmful to
still-maturing high school students.
"They may look like they're adults, but they're teenagers," he said.
"They have a lot of stuff that they're trying to figure out."
Janiuk said the parents' criticism of Franklin's teaching was also
personal.
"Even though he may not have directed it at me, it attacked me," she
said. "It's not an easy thing to deal with, knowing a sizeable part of
the town is upset that you exist."
Bennett said parents should have been notified ahead of time about the
discussion and given the option to remove their children.
"You can talk about gays, but there are times when that discussion needs
to stay away from the students. It becomes offensive to people," Bennett
said. "If someone decides to do that to their own body, that's a very
private issue."
Janiuk disagreed.
"They're not private issues, they're life issues," she said. "They're no
more private than your ethnicity or your family. That's who you are and
there's nothing wrong with expressing it. It doesn't have to be kept
secret."
In addition to the rally, Janiuk said, she is organizing an educational
panel and forum at Memorial in response to the debate. She also plans to
meet with the school's principal.
"I've had a lot of people say, 'Jess, just tell me where to be,' "
Janiuk said. "I'm not concerned (for myself). It's for everyone who is
now being told they're not welcome here."
In early May, the school board received an unsigned letter from parents
objecting to sexual and political issues in the classroom. Bennett said
the group is asking for the school's administration and staff to be
retrained on rules, for the school to enforce a dress code for teachers
banning "offensive" clothing such as "rainbow-colored necklaces," for
the school board to hold a forum with parents twice a year and for the
educational system to "return to American heritage and tradition in the
classroom."
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