Scholastic Publishes One Sided Story of Coal
Scholastic, Inc., was recently hammered for distributing a coal industry funded fourth-grade curriculum. In response, three advocacy groups have launched a letter writing campaign asking Scholastic, Inc. to stop distributing the materials.
From The New York Times:
Childrens books and other educational materials produced by the publisher Scholastic reach about 90 percent of the nations classrooms. With this enormous access to what amounts to a captive audience of children, the company has a special obligation to adhere to high educational standards.
It fell short of that when it produced a fourth-grade lesson packet called The United States of Energy, a treatise on coal that was paid for by the American Coal Foundation, a nonprofit group. As Tamar Lewin noted in The Times on Thursday, the lessons talked about the benefits of coal and the pervasiveness of power plants fueled by it and omitted mention of minor things like toxic waste, mountain-top removal and greenhouse gases.
The issue came to light recently when childrens advocacy groups hammered Scholastic for giving a one-sided view of coal usage. This is not the first time that the company had come under fire. Last year, the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood attacked Scholastic for encouraging schools to have classroom parties with, and to collect labels from, the sugary juice drink SunnyD as a way of winning free books.