this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2024
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Oklahoma’s education board has revoked the license of a former teacher who drew national attention during surging book-ban efforts across the U.S. in 2022 when she covered part of her classroom bookshelf in red tape with the words “Books the state didn’t want you to read.”

The decision Thursday went against a judge who had advised the Oklahoma Board of Education not to revoke the license of Summer Boismier, who had also put in her high school classroom a QR code of the Brooklyn Public Library’s catalogue of banned books.

An attorney for Boismier, who now works at the Brooklyn Public Library in New York City, told reporters after the board meeting that they would seek to overturn the decision.

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[–] Snapz@lemmy.world 112 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Teacher will eventually get a fat, taxpayer-funded lawsuit award. The republicans are such backwards, self-hating, broken people.

How hard would it be for another state, that isn't so dedicated to shooting its own foot, reinstate/award them a teaching license as a gesture?

[–] Bluefalcon@discuss.tchncs.de 24 points 1 year ago (1 children)

For teachers in that state it would be pretty easy since it's a compact state. I would recommend Oregon or Washington.

https://teachercompact.org/compact-map/

[–] ripcord@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago

For 3 seconds or so I was confused, wondering why Oregon or Washington would be considered particularly small or dense

[–] ____@infosec.pub 10 points 1 year ago

Generally? Well within the executive power / administrative law of any given state as noted by BlueFalcon below.

Practically? I'd expect it to be quite a struggle. For licensed professions in general (doctors, real estate, insurance, hairdressers, etc.) most or all states ask a question to the effect of "Has your license for profession ever been suspended or revoked in any other state?". It may or may not be an automatic disqualifier, but even if not it's an uphill battle.

It prevents the real estate agent who stole someone's earnest money from upping stakes to the next state and getting licensed, but since the standards for suspending/revoking licenses vary widely by state I lean towards believing that perhaps it should be a factor, and perhaps the state board of profession should meet to review the application, but previous disciplinary action in some other state is in no way an absolute statement about someone's fitness to practice in their chosen field.