Texas elementary school teacher claims she was FIRED over TikTok
post about letting third graders sit out Pledge of Allegiance 'after she
taught lesson on Nazi propaganda and students saw parallels'
Sophia DeLoretto-Chudy was let go over a TikTok video she posted in March. And she let students sit during the Pledge of Allegiance
By Hope Sloop
Daily Mail
June 12, 2023
A third-grade teacher at a Texas
elementary school was fired after she made a TikTok video where she
'embarrassed' an administrator by talking about a list of concerns given
to her
An elementary school teacher has claimed she was fired for allowing third graders to sit during the Pledge of Allegiance.
Sophia
DeLoretto-Chudy posted a viral TikTok video claiming that she was
ousted after she taught kids about Nazi propaganda and they saw
parallels with the Pledge.
In the video
she posted a list of concerns purportedly raised by administrators at
Becker Elementary School in Austin, Texas. Among them were failure to
respond to emails in a timely manner and failure to complete data
analysis.
According to DeLoretto-Chudy, the students
made their own decision to sit after discussing the Pledge and their
right to protest.
She claimed their
interest in protesting came after she taught them about how Adolf Hitler
had tried to brainwash Germany's youth with Nazi propaganda, and
implied her students had begun to view the Pledge similarly.
Sophia DeLoretto-Chudy was in her
first-year of teaching at Becker Elementary School in Austin when an
official pulled her into a meeting to discuss some issues.
Becker Elementary School in Austin, Texas where DeLoretto-Chudy taught
Text displayed on her video reads: 'In
Texas it's a crime to question the pledge of allegiance.' It amassed
millions of views and hundreds of thousands of likes.
Talking with FOX 26,
DeLoretto-Chudy said she thought when a school official called her into
their office that they were going to offer help after a rough first
year.
'They brought me a list of
concerns. I was a little taken aback,' the teacher who worked with
eight-year-olds said. 'It caused me to have quite a bit of anxiety.'
In
that meeting, the administrator presented her with a lengthy list of
issues with her job performance, including her work attire among other
things.
'It just felt like a very
demoralizing meeting. I think that's really the word for it, where I
didn't feel supported, and I felt disrespected,' said DeLoretto-Chudy.
Shocked
by the interaction, she took the paper to TikTok where she showed the
world what her administrator had told her she was doing wrong.
'We've
noticed an intentional attempt in teaching your students about their
legal and constitutional rights,' one line from the paper reads.
It
goes on to ask how the students came to the decision to 'stay seated'
and inquire whether the group is doing it to 'please their teacher' or
for their own reasons.
DeLoretto-Chudy
had previously run as a Democrat for California Assembly District 54 in
2019, according to a Facebook page dedicated to her campaign.
She
remains an outspoken advocate for liberal causes on TikTok where she
has posted political content calling out Republicans and right-leaning
politicians.
In a follow-up video
posted on the same day, she stated that the concerns only were brought
up to her after officials noticed her kids sitting during the Pledge.
This is the note presented to the teacher indicating the concerns administrators brought up during their meeting
DeLoretto-Chudy had previously
run as a Democrat for California Assembly District 54 in 2019, according
to a Facebook page dedicated to her campaign
DeLoretto-Chudy at a protest in support of abortion rights for women
She remains an outspoken advocate
for liberal causes on TikTok where she has posted political content
calling out Republicans and right-leaning politicians
'Which
they decided to do for themselves after learning during Holocaust
Remembrance Week about propaganda and the Hitler Youth,' she said.
DeLoretto-Chudy
went on to explain that she had a conversation with her class about the
Civil War origins of the Pledge which led to the children choosing to
abstain.
The teacher said that the
class had looked up the history of the Pledge together and discovered it
was recited in schools after the war to unite the country.
According to the Smithsonian Institution,
the reciting of the Pledge of Allegiance in schools was not commonplace
until October 1892, nearly 30 years after the Civil War had ended.
The
administration officials shared their concerns that the teacher may
have been forcing her own political opinions on the topic onto the
students.
Among the questions
presented to the teacher were inquiries into whether or not parents were
aware of the silent protest and if they fully understand their
actions.
In the video, DeLoretto-Chudy
mentioned that following the conversation about the Pledge's history,
she told the students about Colin Kaepernick.
Kaepernick,
a former NFL quarterback, notably received backlash for his protest of
the National Anthem before games and has remained a free agent since
2017.
'It didn't have anything to do
with my instructional practices or what I was teaching or how I was
teaching,' DeLoretto-Chudy said of the way she was dismissed. Pictured:
The letter informing her that administration officials were pushing for
her termination
The letter given to the teacher informing her of her termination on April 27
The topic has divided many on the
internet who disagree fervently on whether or not the teacher had the
right to have such discussions with young children
The
original 45-second video made to vent about the issues administrators
had presented blew up overnight, amassing more than a million views.
The next day, human resources put her on administrative leave for the video.
'I
had my badge taken away,' DeLoretto-Chudy said. 'I was locked out of
all the apps, was not allowed to communicate with anybody.'
According
to the district, the third-grade teacher was let go not because of her
actions inside the classroom, but because she violated the social media
policy.
FOX 26 reported that the employee handbook
explicitly addresses social media interfering with an employee's
ability to do his or her job.
If it does impact their performance, the employee is subject to termination.
'It
didn't have anything to do with my instructional practices or what I
was teaching or how I was teaching,' DeLoretto-Chudy said of the way she
was dismissed.
'And it had everything to do with the fact that I had embarrassed one of my administrators on TikTok,' she continued.
The
topic has divided many on the internet who disagree fervently on
whether or not the teacher had the right to have such discussions with
young children.
Others argued that it comes down to her refusal to follow the school district's social media policy and nothing more.
'As an educator, she did several things wrong ... Her audacity just blows my mind,' one YouTube commenter wrote on FOX 26's video.
'In
public schools, students do not have to stand for the pledge of
allegiance if they choose not to. First Amendment,' another wrote.
'Teachers don't have more rights than the parents,' one person added.
'What did she do wrong though,' wrote one more.
1 comment:
Close the door on your way out.
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